Texarkana Gazette

Revenue not down as much as Arkansas officials had feared

- From Arkansas Senate Informatio­n Office

LITTLE ROCK – State revenues have decreased because of the economic consequenc­es of the coronaviru­s outbreak, but not as much as Arkansas budget officials had feared.

In early April the Department of Finance and Administra­tion lowered its official forecast for Fiscal Year 2021 because so many businesses were required to close and so many Arkansas residents suddenly became unemployed.

Later in April the legislatur­e approved state agency budgets for Fiscal Year 2021 based on that revised economic forecast.

Based on tax revenue collected in May, that revised forecast was very conservati­ve. Sales tax collection­s provided an example of hoping for the best while preparing for the worst. Also sales tax collection­s in May were down 2.8% compared to the previous year; They were still 8.5% above the April forecast.

June 30 marks the end of Fiscal Year 2020 and Fiscal Year 2021 begins on July 1. Monthly revenue reports are an accurate gauge of economic activity in Arkansas.

Sales taxes collected on the purchase of motor vehicles and general retail sales tax collection­s were higher than expected in May.

Individual income tax collection­s reflect the health of the state’s labor market. Those revenues were above forecast in May by 1.3%, but that was mainly due to the changing of the deadline for filing. In order to give taxpayers some relief during the outbreak, Arkansas postponed the deadline for filing state individual income taxes from April 15 to July 15.

Tobacco taxes in May were down 1.1% from a year ago, and gaming taxes from casinos were zero, because they were closed in April to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s. Taxes collected in April were supposed to be remitted in May. Last year, gaming taxes on casinos collected $6.2 million in May. Taxes on alcohol were down 14.6% from the same month in 2019.

Help for Hospitals

Federal funding has helped the state provide crucial services during the coronaviru­s outbreak. For example, a steering committee appointed by the governor recently recommende­d spending $109.6 million in federal funds to help Arkansas hospitals.

The CARES Act Steering

Committee recommende­d also that $250 million be put in a reserve fund, to be available in October or afterward.

CARES stands for the Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act. Arkansas stands to receive about $1.25 billion from the act. To date, the steering committee has allocated $439 million in CARES Act funds.

The aid to hospitals is for expenses such as enhancing protection of patients, visitors and staff to prevent the spread of Covid-19. Also, the funding can be used for improved technology, education, training and preparatio­ns.

The hospitals can use the money only for activities for which there is no other source of payment. As one top official said, the hospitals cannot double dip.

The steering committee is considerin­g requests to help local government­s and higher education institutio­ns. It also is working on proposals to improve access to broadband Internet in rural areas.

It has allocated money for state prison units to purchase protective equipment, such as masks. State prisons have been hard hit by the coronaviru­s because so many people are together in enclosed spaces.

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