The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Modest surplus sparks two visions

- By Keith M. Phaneuf CTMirror.com

As state government prepares to close the books on the last fiscal year, there are two very different visions of Connecticu­t’s finances.

Gov. Dannel P. Malloy’s administra­tion notes that the state is once again building an emergency budget reserve, while tax receipts – which frequently fell short of projection­s over the last two years – finally appear to have caught up to the forecasts.

But one of the Democratic governor’s GOP gubernator­ial rivals noted Wednesday that most of the state’s modest fiscal cushion can be attributed to fiscal gimmicks and to luck. Senate Minority Leader John P. McKinney, R-Fairfield, also

noted that Connecticu­t’s jobless rate and its sales tax receipts – two key indicators of economic health – remain poor.

Malloy’s budget office projected this week that the surplus for the 2012-13 fiscal year would climb to nearly $360 million.

Though the last fiscal year ended on June 30, officials still are adjusting the final numbers. Certain tax receipts received during the summer are applied to the prior year. Comptrolle­r Kevin P. Lembo won’t close the books officially on 2012-13 until Sept. 1.

Though about $221 million of that $360 million windfall already is committed to support spending in new state budget, that still leaves about $139 million to deposit into the budget reserve, commonly known as the Rainy Day Fund.

“Given the deficit forecasts issued earlier in the fiscal year, we note that this deposit is a significan­t accomplish­ment,” Malloy’s budget chief, Benjamin Barnes, wrote in his monthly report to Lembo. “…Rebuilding reserves will serve the state well as a contingenc­y against the next economic downturn.”

That $139 million deposit, coupled with $93 million placed in the Rainy Day Fund last summer, brings the overall reserve to $232 million, which represents about 1.4 percent of this year’s operating budget. The state is allowed to place up to 10 percent in the reserve, which had been emptied before Malloy took office by former Gov. M. Jodi Rell and by the 2009-10 legislatur­e.

Barnes’ latest report also showed tax receipts for last year’s operating budget appeared to finish $102 million above projection­s, thanks in part to a last-minute surge in income tax receipts.

That’s a reversal from a string of fiscal retreats the Malloy administra­tion made over the last two years. Between October 2011 and January 2013 the administra­tion scaled back tax revenue forecasts five times as actually receipts continuall­y came up short. But McKinney said the administra­tion’s days of budgetary wishful thinking haven’t ended.

The $37.6 billion, two-year budget Malloy and his fellow Democrats in the legislatur­e’s majority approved to cover this fiscal year and next leaves state finances on pace for a $712 million operating deficit in the first fiscal year after the November 2014 gubernator­ial election. That represents a gap of about 4 percent in the annual operating budget.

And while McKinney notes that post-election shortfall was created largely by hundreds of millions of dollars in borrowing, fund raids and other fiscal gimmicks used to balance the current budget, he also is fearful that the projected deficit is larger.

That’s because the budget is built upon some controvers­ial economic assumption­s, including a dramatic drop in unemployme­nt and a sharp rise in personal income starting 12 months from now.

“It’s good that we are seeing some bright news in the budget,” Peter Gioia, chief economist for the Connecticu­t Business and Industry Associatio­n, said of the last budget surplus.

“But we are still in the beginning stages of a sustainabl­e recovery. There is still weak growth.”

Gioia estimates Connecticu­t would need to add 35,000 jobs and see personal income rise by about 7 percent to generate enough tax revenues to meet the projection­s for the 2014-15 fiscal year – the bud- get that will be in effect when the next gubernator­ial race comes to a conclusion.

That projection “is too rosy,” Gioia added, noting that unemployme­nt remains just over 8 percent. “We’ve still got a long way to go.”

Malloy spokesman Andrew Doba said Wednesday that “we are adding privatesec­tor jobs at a faster clip now than at any other time since the last 1990s.

McKinney noted that the state’s inheritanc­e tax raked in $440 million – more than 2 ½ times what was expected. Had not what even Malloy conceded was a budgetary fluke occurred, three-quarters of last year’s surplus would vanish and overall tax receipts would again have fallen short of projection­s.

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