Daily Press

Officials: Expect $4.24B more NC revenue this year, $2B next

- By Gary D. Robertson

RALEIGH, N.C. — North Carolina government tax collection­s will smash the projection­s used to help fashion the first year of the current two-year state budget, officials announced Monday as lawmakers return next week to begin figuring out what to do with billions in surplus.

The legislatur­e’s economists and Gov. Roy Cooper’s budget office now believe state coffers should take in $4.24 billion more in the fiscal year ending June 30 than predicted the previous June, according to a memo from the General Assembly Fiscal Research Division. That’s a nearly 15% increase, bringing overall revenues this year above $32.65 billion.

A surplus had already been predicted in February, when the Cooper administra­tion said actual revenues through January were almost $1.4 billion ahead of previous expectatio­ns. At the time, the Office of State Budget and

Management estimated overcollec­tions of $2.4 billion by June 30.

In addition to the $4.24 billion, the consensus forecast by the executive and legislativ­e branches now expects nearly $2 billion, or nearly 7%, more will be collected in the next fiscal year starting July 1 above and beyond what was projected for the second year of the budget.

These new numbers will inform Cooper and Republican budget-writers when they consider changes to the second year that were approved in November. Such adjustment­s are traditiona­lly the primary job of the General Assembly when it meets in even-numbered years. This “short” session begins this year on May 18.

These additional revenues can lead to additional tax cuts; higher salaries; greater spending on one-time projects or permanent programs; flusher reserves for fiscal or natural emergencie­s; or a combinatio­n of any or all.

Governors usually propose their adjustment ideas as the session is about to start. The surplus is likely to renew calls by Cooper and others for the legislatur­e to spend more to address inequities in public education that the plaintiffs in long-standing “Leandro” litigation have sought to address. The spring forecast is usually released after individual and business tax returns are filed in mid-April — usually the most volatile portion of the tax year.

The division memo from economist Emma Turner says detailed descriptio­ns about final April tax collection­s were not available when the forecast was completed because the state Revenue Department was still processing returns. But Turner wrote that final income tax returns in April should exceed expectatio­ns by more than $1.4 billion.

Turner said it became evident in March that state employment had returned to pre-pandemic levels last summer and had exceeded them, resulting in wage gains. That leads to higher income tax collection­s. Sales and use tax collection­s also should finish well ahead of forecast due to strong consumer spending and inflation, she wrote.

“Record-breaking stock market returns and corporate profits in 2021 were also unanticipa­ted and generated significan­t revisions to the forecast,” she wrote.

In a joint news release, Senate leader Phil Berger and House Speaker Tim Moore said the forecast “highlights the General Assembly’s winning formula of low taxes, reasonable regulation­s, and responsibl­e spending.”

The fiscal forecast does project slower economic growth. While there’s an elevated risk of a recession “given geopolitic­al uncertaint­y and evolving monetary policy by the Federal Reserve to address high inflation,” Turner wrote, the forecast “does not foresee a near-term recession.” Still the uncertaint­y could prompt legislator­s to avoid initiating expensive, multiyear programs.

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