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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

States Feeling the Pinch From Bush Economy

By Daniel B. Wood, Christian Science Monitor. Posted October 24, 2007.


Housing bust and falling sales-tax revenues remind some officials of the period before 2001 recession.
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Florida is working in special legislative session to cut property taxes as a way to stimulate consumer spending.

Nevada has called for a 5 percent cut in the budgets of all state agencies.

Michigan has expanded its sales tax to cover luxury services such as massages, manicures, and skiing, which were not taxed previously, and has increased the income-tax rate from 3.9 percent to 4.35 percent.

With at least a quarter of US states collecting less money than anticipated from sales taxes, and many others barely holding even with inflation in their overall revenues, state budgets appear to be headed for tough times, say several economists. Closing the gap may require states to use creative measures, these same economists predict. With a falling housing market, several experts see troubling economic warnings similar to those that preceded the US recession in 2001.

This time, they say, states would probably be on shakier ground because they won't have the years of fat that the 1990s stock-market boom provided.

"Many of the indicators, from sales-tax receipts to national debt to purchase of US treasury bonds, are similar to the year 2000," says Philippa Dunne, a co-editor of The Liscio Report on the economy. "But this time, states may have to take more drastic measures because they won't be coming out of a decade in which they had tons of money."

Why housing market downturn is key sign

The receding housing boom is affecting nearly every state and is a key indicator, say Ms. Dunne and others, because it produces a domino effect, colliding with the consumer purchases that feed state treasuries via sales taxes. On average, about one-third of state income comes from sales taxes on consumer items.

"When people are not buying homes, they are not buying appliances and furniture and other big-ticket items to go inside them," says Robert Ward of the Rockefeller Institute of Government in Albany, N.Y.

Also related to the diminishing sales-tax receipts is the dwindling equity in homes, exacerbated by the raft of foreclosures nationwide. Nevada, Florida, California, Arizona, and Michigan have been hit the hardest by declines in the housing market according to the number of houses and condos bought and sold.

"People use the equity in their homes as a cash machine by taking out additional home- equity lines … and when that is gone or tapped out, it means smaller lending support for consumer spending for all goods," says Mark McMullen, a senior economist in Portland, Ore., for Economy.com. "There is going to continue to be a headwind for consumer spending and job gains, both of which weaken the state tax base."

Both stock market and state spending up

Others are more sanguine, noting two trends: The stock market is doing well, and state spending in 2007 grew 8.6 percent over the previous year, two points above the 30-year average.

"Many states say they are experiencing uncertainty and a heightened awareness over dropping revenues, but no one to date is ringing the bell to say we are in deep trouble," says Arturo Perez, an economist with the National Conference of State Legislatures.


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See more stories tagged with: states, economy, taxes, budget, state government

Daniel B. Wood is a staff writer for the Christian Science Monitor.



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It took this long?
Posted by: donl51 on Oct 27, 2007 5:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
for somebody to finally open their mouth about this? It's been going on for years, States get subsidies from the fed except in Bushs gov.theirs no money! ,pick a reason why! States use this money to pay for lots of very important services,no mo money goodbye services, so to offset, States raise prop. tax, sales tax hell every tax they can,,y'know those coupla hundred you saved in fed taxes last year? well to the state you reside in you more than made up for it,unless you're of the ultra-rich 1-5% then you made out some more, I'm not talking out my butt here ,I work,pay taxes watch taxes go up look around talk to others and watch more and more of my best friends of decades sell out and leave looking for a cheaper state to live in ...I live in New Jersey! by the way .and if Bush and his type continue to run this country the way they have ,we may all be moving to Mexico!.....PS, I read that lots of folks are moving out of NJ 'cause its so expensive to live in ,I add corrupt to that ,really is!

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