Porterville Recorder

Don’t believe Mcconnell: State, local aid needed

- By MICHAEL HILTZIK

For some reason, the fiscal crisis engulfing states and localities due to the COVID-19 pandemic has the power to cloud Republican­s’ minds.

There could be no other explanatio­n for the resolute disdain shown by the GOP congressio­nal caucus toward the $350-billion provision of state and local aid in President Biden’s $1.9-trillion pandemic relief proposal.

“This is no time to send wheelbarro­ws of cash to state and local government­s that they simply, factually, do not need,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch Mcconnell (R-KY.) huffed earlier this month.

“By the way,” he added, “state and local tax receipts already fully rebounded in Q3 to their highest level in American history.”

Sticking a shiv into the concept of bipartisan­ship on Capitol Hill, Mcconnell’s press release attacking the state and local aid provision bore the heading, “Democrats Are Yet Again Pushing Massive Bailouts For Big-spending States.”

It’s hard to pinpoint where Mcconnell gets his informatio­n, but the best that can be said about it is it’s cherry-picked.

State revenues are expected to fall by 4.4 percent in fiscal 2021 (that is, from July 1, 2020, through June 30, 2021, including the third quarter of 2020) compared to “already depressed fiscal 2020 levels,” the National Assn. of State Budget Officers reported last fall.

That would mean a drop of 10.8 percent from revenue projection­s in pre-pandemic budget proposals, the associatio­n said.

States and local government­s face a revenue shortfall of $200 billion to $300 billion through fiscal 2022, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities calculated this month — and that’s assuming they wipe out all the rainy-day savings they had accumulate­d before the pandemic struck.

As for the assertion Biden’s pandemic relief would be a handout to “big-spending” (read “Democratic”) states, it’s true California would receive the largest share, $41 billion, according to a Democratic markup of the proposal.

That’s because California is the biggest state. The second-biggest recipient would be red Texas, getting $27 billion; red Florida comes in fourth, at $16.5 billion. The pandemic has been a bipartisan fiscal threat.

The sleight-of-hand stunt Mcconnell is offering his audience is states and localities have done better fiscally than anyone expected in the first months of the pandemic.

“A lot of states sharply reduced revenue forecasts downward immediatel­y after the outbreak of COVID-19,” Brian Sigritz, NASBO’S director of state fiscal studies, told me.

For a variety of reasons, the most dire expectatio­ns didn’t come true. But in the majority of states, revenue still hasn’t recovered to pre-pandemic levels.

“Money is still tight and states still need to respond to COVID-19,” Sigritz says. “The states aren’t out of the woods yet.”

Another misleading factor is the national picture of state and local finances is skewed by a single outlier: California.

Last May, as legislator­s and Gov. Gavin Newsom crafted the 2020-2021 state budget, “they were projecting a bloodbath,” Byron Lutz, a fiscal analyst for the Federal Reserve Board, told a Brookings Institutio­n webcast audience on Feb. 10.

“They thought they were going to be down $30 billion relative to their pre-pandemic projection” of about $153 billion in state tax and fee revenues, Lutz said.

By November, however, budget analysts were projecting a windfall of some $26 billion instead. That was eventually revised to about $15 billion.

Several factors contribute­d to the pleasant surprise. One was the infusion of billions of dollars in congressio­nal pandemic aid, including enhanced unemployme­nt benefits, stimulus checks to most households, and other assistance.

Every state got a piece of that pie, of course. But California’s tax system also delivered gains. The state is heavily reliant on a progressiv­e personal income tax, which held up well in part because a buoyant stock market generated billions in capital gains tax revenues.

States without an income tax and consequent­ly more dependent on regressive sources such as sales taxes didn’t have that cushion.

The diversific­ation of California’s economy also helped. Two categories of states have seen the largest shortfalls of revenue relative to pre-pandemic expectatio­ns: those dependent on energy and thus vulnerable to the fall of oil prices (such as Alaska, North Dakota and Texas) and those dependent on tourism (Hawaii, Nevada and Florida).

Still, budget analysts warn the windfall California saw in the last fiscal year and the current year is unlikely to last.

Revenues from the state’s three largest taxes — on income, sales and property — are expected to grow by only about 1 percent a year in fiscal 2022 and later, rather than the 4.4 percent annual gain baked into budget projection­s. The result, the Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office forecast in November, will be an annual deficit rising to as much as $17 billion by 2024-2025.

For all that Mcconnell and his ilk denigrate state and local aid as bailouts to blue states, four of the states mentioned above are politicall­y blood-red.

Virtually every state has suffered from the pandemic’s short-circuiting of previous budget expectatio­ns, Lutz observed. In the two years before the pandemic, states had been experienci­ng annual increases averaging about 5 percent.

“They had every reason to expect this growth to continue into 2020 and beyond, and they budgeted in that manner,” Lutz said. Even though revenue has been flat for 2020 compared to 2019, he said, “that was a large decline relative to what their expectatio­ns were and that opened up large budget holes.”

The other side of the state and local fiscal coin is spending. Prospects for demands on state budgets are grim. Public health, social services and education are all responsibi­lities of state and local government, and costs in those sectors are exploding.

The U.S. economy appears to have gotten through the worst of the pandemic in surprising­ly good shape. But it’s living on a knife edge. Without more aid, state and local government­s will be forced to draw their belts tighter.

That means fewer municipal workers, more deferred maintenanc­e of roads and bridges, and less disposable income for everybody.

The time will come when the economy can stand on its own two feet without more infusions of federal capital, but we’re not there yet.

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