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					| Tuesday, January 18, 2022 |  
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								|  | Before Pandemic, Spending Exceeded Long-Term Revenue in Hawaii By Selected News Articles @ 7:59 PM :: 3755 Views  ::  Economy,  Hawaii State Government,  COVID-19
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														| Before Pandemic, Spending Exceeded Long-Term Revenue in 8 States Insights From Fiscal 50’s Key Measures of State Fiscal Health From Pew Trust, December 22, 2021 (excerpt) ...States’ performance is analyzed from two perspectives: First, the 15-year lump sum of revenue relative to expenses, to uncover states’ ability to bring in sufficient funds to cover costs over the long term; and second, the year-by-year record for each state, to identify how often it experienced shortfalls. Comparing states’ revenue—comprising much more than tax dollars—and expenses, in aggregate and year-by-year totals from fiscal 2005 to 2019, shows: 
 New Jersey had the largest deficit, with aggregate revenue able to cover only 91.5% of aggregate expenses, followed by Illinois (94.1%). They were the only two states with aggregate shortfalls exceeding 5% of total expenses, and the only ones with annual deficits in each of the 15 years.Additional states with symptoms of structural deficits were, Massachusetts (96.2%), Hawaii (97.2%), Kentucky (98.4%), Maryland (99.1%),New York (99.5%), and Delaware (99.8%). All but Delaware experienced deficits in at least 10 of the 15 years.Alaska accumulated the largest 15-year surplus (135%). Although Alaska’s balance is high, revenue has been lower and the state has pulled back on spending compared with earlier in the decade. Other states with the largest accumulated surpluses since fiscal 2005 were North Dakota (123.4%), Wyoming (124.9%), Utah (111.1%), and Montana (109.5%). Resource-rich states tend to acquire large surpluses in boom years that can help cushion shortfalls when oil or mining revenue decline.Aside from Montana, which was the only state to end each year with a surplus, 11 recorded just one deficit over the 15 years examined: Idaho, Iowa, North Carolina, North Dakota, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and West Virginia....   read ... Full Report   |  |  |  |  |  |