Boston Herald

Revenue rebounds after steep drop in April

- By State House News Service — Chris Lisinski / SHNS

State tax revenues surpassed expectatio­ns in May after a steep nosedive in April, yet the total haul remains hundreds of millions of dollars short of projection­s with the budget year drawing to a close, officials said Monday.

The Department of Revenue announced that Massachuse­tts collected $2.706 billion in May 2023, an increase of $236 million or 9.5% over May 2022 and $169 million or 6.7% above the most recent benchmark projection for the month.

That’s a bounceback after April, when tax collection­s dropped more than $2 billion from the prior year, causing both supporters and opponents of tax relief bills to suggests plans be reevaluate­d.

Healey administra­tion officials signaled at the time they were optimistic they would not need to cut government spending to make up the potential year-end revenue shortfall, particular­ly given the sizable amounts of money in state savings accounts.

Massachuse­tts has collected about $35.026 billion in taxes through the first 11 months of fiscal 2023. That pace lags collection­s through the same stretch of last year, when an unpreceden­ted surplus triggered a long-dormant tax relief law, by $1.936 billion.

The state does not publicly report its spending in the same kind of monthly reports that allow outsiders to track revenue trends.

After adjusting for the net impact of a passthroug­h entity excise, DOR said year-to-date tax collection­s are $619 million or 1.7% less than Beacon Hill budget-writers projected in their most recent year-to-date benchmarks and $583 million less than the original benchmarks used to craft the FY23 state budget.

June is the last month of the fiscal year and a comparativ­ely big one, for better or worse, for tax receipts. The Legislatur­e usually stretches spending decisions into the fall when it approves a final supplement­al budget to close out the fiscal year.

 ?? MATT STONE — BOSTON HERALD ?? State revenues climbed in May, beating expectatio­ns after a nosedive in April, officials said Monday.
MATT STONE — BOSTON HERALD State revenues climbed in May, beating expectatio­ns after a nosedive in April, officials said Monday.

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