Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Budget whiplash is a harsh lesson

- By Da■ Walters

Seventeen months ago, while unveiling a much-revised 202223 state budget, Gov. Gavin Newsom bragged of having a $97.5 billion surplus to expand health care, social equity and educationa­l programs.

“No other state in American history has ever experience­d a surplus as large as this,” Newsom said as he unveiled a $300plus billion budget that the Legislatur­e eagerly adopted with a few tweaks.

The core of the eye-popping surplus was a projected $54.8 billion increase in revenues, mostly personal income taxes, over what Newsom had estimated just five months earlier.

With the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic fading, the state was reaping a bumper crop of taxes and Newsom's revised budget assumed that it would continue for at least another year. However, within weeks of the budget's adoption in June 2022, revenues started to fall below Newsom's rosy assumption­s and he was vetoing spending bills that the Legislatur­e had passed in reaction.

A year after his surplus boasting, Newsom presented a 202324 budget that dealt with a projected $31.5 billion deficit. Since its passage in June, revenues have continued to fall below estimates, which means a continuing gap between income and outgo.

Budget mavens in the governor's Department of Finance and the Legislatur­e are now anxiously awaiting revenue totals from this year's much-delayed income tax filings to see whether the deficit will continue to grow. Personal and corporate income taxes account for more than 75% of the state's general fund revenues.

What happened? How did a $97.5 surplus morph into a $30plus billion deficit in a matter of months?

The pandemic saw more than 2 million California jobs disappear overnight as Newsom ordered large portions of the economy to shut down and the rebound was equally dramatic.

Obviously Newsom and his budget advisors made a huge mistake in assuming that a brief surge in taxes would continue to grow.

But the Newsom administra­tion was not the only entity to be fooled. The Legislatur­e's budget analyst, Gabe Petek, largely confirmed Newsom's rosy 2022 projection­s, tabbing revenues from income and sales taxes to hit $214 billion by 2023-24, $21 billion more than the current $193 billion estimate, which may be too high.

A new report from the federal Bureau of Economic Analysis on the effects of massive federal outlays to combat the economic effects of the pandemic provides another clue as to why California's revenue forecasts were so wrong. State-by-state, the report charts hundreds of billions of dollars that the feds pumped into the economy to support those who were adversely affected by pandemic-related shutdowns.

In 2019, for instance, the state paid out $4.9 billion in unemployme­nt insurance benefits to jobless California workers, but in 2020, thanks to infusions of federal cash, the total jumped to $106.7 billion and in 2021 another $70.2 billion (much of it fraudulent­ly claimed) before reverting to $4.5 billion in 2022.

Overall, unemployme­nt insurance and other “personal transfer receipts” that had surged during the pandemic dropped by $102 billion in 2022.

The sharp increase in federal aid of all kinds pushed California­ns' personal incomes to more than $3 trillion in 2021, but they dropped by about $7 billion in 2022.

Those numbers don't count many more billions in pandemic relief that the feds showered on private businesses, state and local government­s and school districts.

What's done is done but it also should be an object lesson about the pitfalls of revenue forecastin­g.

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