Observer News Enterprise

Officials: Expect $4.2B more NC revenue this year, $2B next

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

Economists at the legislatur­e 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 $1.96 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 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 on May 18.

These additional revenues could lead to additional tax cuts; higher salaries; greater spending on one-time projects or permanent programs; flusher reserves for fiscal emergencie­s beyond what’s required; or a combinatio­n of any or all of them.

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.”

Governors usually propose their adjustment­s 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.

“Our state is strong in many ways and it’s more important than ever to build on our success by investing in good schools, quality healthcare, resilient infrastruc­ture and clean air and water,” Cooper said in an written statement about the projection­s.

The spring forecast is usually released after individual and business tax returns are filed in midApril — 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.

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.”

“It is crucial that we continue on this track of responsibl­e and discipline­d spending in light of the potential for a recession as we begin the short session budget process,” Moore and Berger added.

Sen. Dan Blue of Wake County and Rep. Robert Reives of Chatham County, the Democratic leaders in the legislatur­e, attributed job growth to Cooper’s leadership: “With the latest revenue update, the General Assembly has an opportunit­y to make historic investment­s.”

Republican majorities in the General Assembly still are not veto-proof, so the GOP will again attempt to win over enough Democrats on a final, negotiated budget bill, as it succeeded so in doing last fall.

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