CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 7, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 7, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“GET READY FOR BIGGEST BUDGET CRUNCH IN 12 YEARS”
As of the end of last year, California’s budgetary rainy
day fund amounted to about $20 billion. That sounds like a lot, and the last two
governors both put more cash than legally required into the fund.
Now
the rainy day has arrived. Skies are dark, figurative rain clouds loom over the
Sierra Nevada and other mountain ranges. It’s almost time to tap into the rainy
day fund. But it would be unwise to take all the money at once, just as no
family should exhaust all its savings in one fell swoop, if at all possible.
For the coronavirus pandemic, now about six weeks old in
California, brought with it enormous personal and corporate financial losses,
which will soon translate into vastly lowered revenues for state government.
That may last awhile.
Personal income taxes for 2020, mostly to be paid next
year, will be much lower than this year’s and last year’s unless the stock
market rockets back up at the same extended record pace it has lost ground over
the last two months. With most businesses shuttered and restaurants, bars,
sports teams and their arenas all idled to avoid disease contagion, corporate
taxes will also skid. Income tax revenues will fall, too, because of the
layoffs and unemployment the closures have brought.
The last time anything like this happened to California, in
the fiscal crisis of 2008-11, these same types of tax receipts nose-dived, and
quickly. In 2007, for one example, the state took in $11 billion worth of
capital gains taxes. The very next year, capital gains tax receipts came to just
$2.3 billion, a drop of about 80 percent.
Capital gains taxes paid to the state were about 50 percent
higher in 2018 and 2019 than in 2007. They will likely come to about $15
billion this year. But they will certainly drop in 2021, and by at least as
much as in 2008, barring a miracle stock market recovery.
The rainy day fund can make up some of this, but not all.
And that won’t account for the anticipated income and corporate tax dollars the
state will not be getting.
All of which means anyone or any program dependent on state
budget support needs to get set right now for serious belt-tightening on a
scale unseen in more than a decade. The days of relatively easy money are over.
This means the $2 billion Gov. Gavin Newsom promised to
contribute toward housing the homeless probably will be cut or will simply evaporate.
It means plans for the massive tunnel the governor would like to bore beneath
the Delta of the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers may not advance nearly as
fast as expected. It means schools must prepare to spend far less in the
2021-2022 academic year than they have lately. It could mean a big cut in state
support for the University of California and the Cal State system, both of
which saw such backing sliced dramatically during the last fiscal crisis.
Many more programs and proposals will also be affected, but
it’s hard to pinpoint Newsom’s priorities and the Legislature’s.
They probably don’t even know those priorities today, and
will likely spend months hashing it out. If Newsom is wise, the scheduled May
revision of his proposed 2020-21 budget will slash many categories even if the
state begins to pull out of immediate crisis mode by then.
That way, state government could spread the harm from the
coronavirus financial crisis over at least two or three years, rather than
imposing all the needed cuts at once a year from now. Yes, this would be bitter
medicine for a state already disrupted by the pandemic, but it would be easier
to take than the kind of massive slashing that would come next year if everything
is left intact in budget negotiations this spring and summer.
All of which means that anyone who thought the far-reaching
ripples of the viral threat were already pretty bad now needs to get ready for further
crises to come.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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