The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Analysis: Virus crisis could erode one-third of CT revenue

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

Connecticu­t’s finances are considerab­ly worse than even the ugly scenario Gov. Ned Lamont’s administra­tion painted in early May, if the analysts behind a new private study are correct.

The coronaviru­s-induced recession could erode more than $6.5 billion in state revenues next fiscal year — two-and-a-half times the gap administra­tion officials predicted — if researcher­s from Arizona State and Old Dominion universiti­es are correct.

The last time Connecticu­t faced a deficit close to $4 billion, in 2011, thenGov. Dannel P. Malloy and the legislatur­e responded with tax increases worth more than $1.8 billion.

The researcher­s’ new nightmare scenario hinges on the relationsh­ip between unemployme­nt and lost revenue. And economists broadly concede the current job market is facing unpreceden­ted volatility, making any prediction equally uncertain.

The fiscal crisis is unparallel­ed nationally “given the rapid expansion of

a global pandemic, the failure of the federal government to effectivel­y respond to the emerging pandemic, the synchroniz­ed economic shock across states” and the variation in state efforts to contain it, wrote economists Christos A. Makridis and Robert M. McNab.

The researcher­s studied states’ revenue and labor market trends from 1994 through 2019, finding that for every 1 percent rise in employment, tax revenues, on average, jumped 1.56 percent. Income and corporatio­n taxes tend to climb even faster relative to job growth.

Comparing these trends with the unpreceden­ted jobs losses during this pandemic, Makridis and McNab projected states, on average, would lose 20 percent of annual revenues.

Most of the states facing a larger-than-average drop are heavily reliant on income tax receipts to fuel their respective budgets.

Connecticu­t is projected to face a 32.7 percent drop, 10th-worse of all states, with neighborin­g New York ranking first at 40 percent.

Lamont’s budget director, Office of Policy and Management Secretary

Melissa McCaw, warned in early May that state revenues — if the current recession were similar to the downturn of 2007-09 — would leave a $2.7 billion hole in the fiscal year beginning July 1. And roughly 90 percent of that gap is due to eroding revenues rather than cost increases.

A $2.7 billion gap is imposing enough, representi­ng a gap of 13.5 percent in the General Fund. Administra­tion officials say it would take the entire rainy day fund, plus about $500 million in spending cuts and revenue enhancemen­ts to close that gap.

But if the shortfall is close to $6.5 billion, as Makridis and McNab project, one-third of Connecticu­t’s budget would be unfunded.

Even the rainy day fund — which is still expected to hold $2.2 billion after plugging deficit in the fiscal year that ends June 30 — would solve less than half of the problem Connecticu­t faces in July.

And if revenue losses for the 2021-22 and 202223 fiscal years also are larger than the $2 billionper-annum projected by the Lamont administra­tion, state officials could be eyeing nothing but ugly budget options next spring.

Both the Lamont administra­tion and the

House chair of the legislatur­e’s tax-writing panel advised Thursday against panic.

Because income and several other state tax filing deadlines were pushed back from April 15 to mid-July, analysts say Connecticu­t won’t have a clear picture of tax revenues until September or later.

It also remains unclear how many of the 269,000 jobs Connecticu­t lost in late March and early April have been permanentl­y eliminated.

Connecticu­t’s congressio­nal delegation remains cautiously optimistic that another round of pandemic relief, with a focus on aid to states and municipali­ties, will be enacted later this year.

Chris McClure, spokesman for the governor’s budget office, said the administra­tion used conservati­ve projection­s for income, sales, corporatio­n and other taxes during its last forecast. And several revenues have been tracking according to projection­s in the weeks since.

“However we must remain diligent in monitoring the key economic data to adapt to changes as needed and plan accordingl­y,” McClure added. “It will be essential to make sure we have a safe re-opening that will hopefully bring with it more employment and economic opportunit­ies to fuel new growth.”

Rep. Jason Rojas, DEast Hartford, co-chair of the Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee, said no one knows how many of the workers displaced since the pandemic began in March will be returning in the coming weeks and months as the economic reopening continues.

The state Department of Labor officially reported a 9.4 percent unemployme­nt rate Thursday for the month of May.

But the state’s official unemployme­nt rate must be based on a local business survey conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau. And Connecticu­t labor officials have said this survey doesn’t accurately reflect jobless totals during the pandemic for several reasons.

Census bureau staff often can’t collect data in person, making the sample sizes particular­ly low. There also have been a high degree of inaccurate responses with many workers identifyin­g themselves as sick when they’d actually been laid off.

State labor officials had pegged the actual unemployme­nt rate for May at about 19 percent.

“We’ll get through this,” Rojas said. “There will be difficult decisions to be made. We knew that.”

 ?? Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Gov. Ned Lamont
Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Gov. Ned Lamont

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