Lodi News-Sentinel

Newsom’s rosy budget ignores troubling trends

- DAN WALTERS

The truly astonishin­g tax revenue numbers cited by Gov. Gavin Newsom last week as he unveiled a revised state budget bring to mind an old adage: “The bigger they are, the harder they fall.”

So much money is pouring into state coffers from personal and corporate income taxes and sales taxes that Newsom said the state will have nearly $100 billion more than it needs to finance ongoing spending, twice as much as his original budget, proposed in January, estimated.

“You’ve never seen a number like this,” Newsom told reporters.

True enough, and it poses a potential problem that could be just as monumental. Big budget surpluses generate big demands for new spending from the advocates of educationa­l, social welfare and medical services. But if spent on new entitlemen­ts, they become liabilitie­s when, inevitably, the economy cools and revenues decline. Boom and bust budgets plagued the state for decades as personal income taxes became the largest revenue source with much of them coming from a relative few high-income taxpayers. Their incomes, largely from capital gains on investment­s, were and are more volatile than those of ordinary people and when they declined, it had a disproport­ionately heavy impact on the state’s finances.

The revised California budget projects $214.2 billion in direct general fund taxes, with personal income taxes supplying 64% of that. Roughly half of those income taxes come from the top 1% of taxpayers, fewer than 200,000 people in a state of nearly 40 million residents.

In introducin­g the revised budget, Newsom said he is “very mindful” of potential volatility and is responding by putting more money into reserves and making very few new permanent and longterm spending commitment­s.

About half of the projected surplus must, by law, go to public education and expanding the “rainy day fund” and other reserves to nearly $40 billion. That leaves an estimated $49 billion of so-called “discretion­ary income” that could be spent on anything he and legislator­s want.

Newsom says his budget would devote 94% of that pot of money to one-time allocation­s or paying down debt to avoid long-term commitment­s that could backfire should the economy cool and revenues decline. “This is important,” he said of that strategy.

Yes it is, because the advocates of expanded entitlemen­ts and their legislativ­e allies contend that the surplus is a golden opportunit­y to fill gaps. Within minutes of Newsom’s budget press conference (which was 132 minutes long, incidental­ly) advocacy groups were expressing disappoint­ment.

The question posed by the astonishin­gly high revenue numbers is whether the good times — at least the good times for highincome taxpayers — will continue.

As the budget revision was being finalized, the world, the nation and California were experienci­ng some troubling trends that Newsom acknowledg­ed.

“This May revision reflects a significan­tly upgraded revenue forecast due to recent cash trends and improvemen­t in key economic indicators,” Newsom told the Legislatur­e. “However, the forecast has become more uncertain given Russia’s war on Ukraine, high rates of inflation, and anticipate­d actions by the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates. In addition, capital gains as a percent of the state’s personal income are at levels last seen in 1999 — just before the dot-com bust. Furthermor­e, the May revision forecast was finalized before the recent declines in the stock market.”

California is not an economic island and those potentiall­y negative factors are beyond the state’s control. However, the budget’s very rosy revenue projection­s ignore them and assume that the golden geese, California’s highincome taxpayers, will continue to prosper and continue laying golden eggs.

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