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1
Michigan’s FY2004 Executive Budget
Michigan’s FY2004 Executive Budget
March 2003
Citizens Research Council of Michiganwww.crcmich.org
March 2003
Citizens Research Council of Michiganwww.crcmich.org
2
The National Situation
• States face Worst Budget Crisis Since World War II
• State Revenue Structures Are Mismatched With Spending Responsibilities
• Spending Growth Outpacing Revenue Increases
• Medicaid a Nationwide Budget Problem for the States
3
The FY2003 Michigan Budget
• Total State Budget — $39 Billion• State’s Two Major Funds are Affected• General Fund — $8.8 Billion • School Aid Fund — $11.5 Billion
• Other State Funds are restricted for other purposes and generally cannot be used for General and School Aid Fund Problem
4
The General Fund
Structural Problem
$5,000.0
$6,000.0
$7,000.0
$8,000.0
$9,000.0
$10,000.0
$11,000.0
FY 98 FY 00 FY 02 FY 04 FY 06
Mill
ion
s
Revenues
Expenditures
5
School Aid Revenues and Spending Gaps(in Millions)
$8,000
$9,000
$10,000
$11,000
$12,000
1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
Base Revenues Non-Federal Spending
6
Causes
• Weak Economy• Stock Market Decline—Capital
Gains Dropped Significantly• Tax Cuts Eroding the Revenue
Base• Failure to Implement Permanent
Budget Balancing Actions
7
The Tax Rate Cuts
• Single Business Tax — 26% of General Fund Revenue
• Individual Income Tax Cut — 8% of General Fund Revenue
• Implication: State Could Afford to Finance Existing Programs With A Third Less Revenue
8
Michigan May Have Done Most of Any State to Damage Itself
• Failed to Act Timely
• Used $4.5 Billion of Reserves and One-time Actions
• Tax Cuts Continued During Recession
9
Summary of One-time Resources (in Millions)
• Rainy Day Fund $1,264 • FY2000 School Aid Fund Surplus 984 • FY2000 General Fund Surplus 212• Medicaid Benefits Trust Fund 561• Advance State Education Tax Collection Date 474• Bond for Pay-as you-go Capital Projects 211• Tobacco Settlement Revenues 259• Employment Contingent Fund 90• Sale of Properties 72• Executive Order 2002-22 204• Other 168
– Total $4,499
10
Tax Rate Cuts
• Rate Reductions in Single Business Tax and Personal Income Tax:
• FY2001 $664 Million• FY2002 $864 Million• FY2003 $1,059 Million
– Three Year Total: $2,577 Million• Incremental Effects of Other Cuts $854 Million
11
Current Status—FY2003
• Economy not Improving Yet
• Executive Order 2002-22—General Fund Cut $460 Million in December
• Executive Order 2003-3—General Fund Cut $158 Million in February
• School Aid Cut $127 Million
• Revenues Up Slightly in February
• Risk Still Downside
12
School Aid — FY2003
• Reductions this Fiscal Year
• Revenues $127 Million Short
• Pro-rata Reductions
• Legislative Efforts to Develop Alternative Stalled
13
($1,600)
($1,400)
($1,200)
($1,000)
($800)
($600)
($400)
($200)
$0
$200
$400
$600
($ in
Mill
ion
s)
FY00 FY01 FY02 FY03 FY04
School Aid Fund
General Fund
General Fund & School Aid FundOperating Gaps
14
School Aid — FY2004
• Appropriations Already Made for FY2004—No Increase from FY2003 Appropriations
• Revenues $366 Million Short—3%
• Revenue Growth Insufficient to Offset Loss of One-time Revenues
• Downside Risk
15
General Fund — FY2004
• Growth in FY2004 and FY2005 Constrained By Income Tax Cuts and Federal Tax Reform
• Gap of $1.7 Billion
• Gap is not Eliminated by Sustained Economic Growth
16
Broadening the Base for the Solution
• Tobacco Settlement Revenues—Eliminate Some Programs and Reallocate Revenue
• Raise Fees to Supplant General Fund Revenues
• Cut Local Revenue Sharing—Revenue Stays in the General Fund
• Use One-time Resources to Buy Time
17
The FY2004 Challenge
• General Fund short $1.7 Billion
• School Aid Fund short $366 Million
• Tax Increases off the table
18
Cutting Spending — 80% of General Fund in Four Areas:
• Higher Education ($2.1B)• Community Health — Mental Health, Public
Health, Medicaid ($2.4B)• Corrections ($1.6B)• FIA — Family Services, Juvenile Justice, Public
Assistance ($1.1B)
--All Other General Fund Programs--$1.7 Billion--
19
Reshaping The Structure
• Across-the-board Cuts Avoided• Priorities Evident• Health Care and Assistance for Poor Protected• Higher Education Support Dropped Significantly• Corrections Policy Changes Advocated• Revenue Sharing Cuts Continue• Tax “Loopholes” Closed
20
Closing the Gap
• General Fund — $1.7 Billion Problem
-Cuts $937M -One-time Actions 42M
-School Aid Fund Subsidy 198M -Corrections Policy Changes 122M
-Revenue Enhancements (Fees, Tax Loopholes) 234M
-Revenue Sharing—Continue Past Cuts 153M -Other Resources 14M
Total $1,700M
21
Another Perspective
• Revenues and Other Resources $288M• Corrections Policy Change 122M• Medicaid 174M• Higher Education—New Cuts 127M• Revenue Sharing—New Cuts 116M• Continue Previous Revenue Sharing Cuts 153M• Continue Executive Order 2003-3 Cuts 133M• Other Spending Reductions 587M
Total $1,700M
22
School Aid
• $366 Million Revenue Problem
-New Revenue-Lottery & Tax Loopholes $ 70M
-School Bond Loan Fund Bond Refinance 100M -Durant Bond Refinance 40M -Cut Categorical Programs 138M-Modify Enrollment Count Weighting
40M-Eliminate General Fund Grant (198M)-One-time Savings From Revenue Sharing 199M
Total 389M
23
Categorical Program Reductions
• Career Preparation ($22M), Partnership for Adult Learning ($20M), Math & Science Centers ($10M), Gifted & Talented ($5M), and Six Others ($11M) Eliminated
• Adult Education Cut 74 Percent $58M• ISD Operations Cut 7 Percent 6M• Other Reductions 5M• Total Categorical Cuts $138M
24
School Aid Increases
• School Lunch Payments $3.2M
• Renaissance Zone Reimbursement 17.7M
• Court-placed Children 2.0M
Total $22.9M
Other Budget Assistance—Retirement Contributions Made By Districts Temporarily Held at 12.99% of Payroll
25
School Aid
• First Year-to-Year Decline in School Aid Spending since Proposal A ($78 million)
• One-time Resources concentrated in School Aid
• First $299 Million of FY2005 revenue growth will be needed to offset FY2004 one-time revenues
• FY2005 potential spending increases will be very small
26
Higher Education
• Appropriations Cut 6.5 Percent $120M• Private College Degree
Reimbursement Eliminated 7M
Total $127M
• FY2003 Cuts continued—2-Year cuts equal 9.9%
• Double Digit Tuition Increases Likely—Some Will Exceed 20%
27
Corrections
• Largest State-Operated Program• Over 30 Percent of State Workforce• $150 Million Increase in Bed Space and
Health Costs Largely Avoided• $33 Million Increase Recommended• Conditional Reintegration Program
Eliminates need for 1,375 Beds• Increased Use of Community-based
Sanctions
28
State Government Employment Trends
0
10,000
20,000
30,000
40,000
50,000
60,000
70,000
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2002
2003
Fiscal Year
Em
plo
yme
nt
Corrections
All OtherDepartments
29
Community Health--Medicaid
• Federal Waiver Constraining Health Benefits to Health Adults $110M
• Pharmaceutical Purchase Collaboration 40M• Quality Assurance Assessment 57M• Declining Caseloads Projected• EPIC Coverage Increased
(15,000 to 42,000) 38M
30
Family Independence Agency
• Caseload Declines Projected
• General Fund Budget Down Slightly from Post E.O. 2003-3 Level
• Staffing may be Most Significant Concern
31
Local Revenue Sharing
• Previous Cuts Maintained $153M• Total Payments Reduced 3 Percent From FY2003 Levels
44M• Total FY2004 Earmarked Growth Captured 72M
Total $269M
• All Reductions Taken From Statutory Portion (27%)• Statutory Percentage Equals 21.3% of Sales Tax at 4
Percent Rate• Proposed Allocation is 15.5%• Statutory Revenue Sharing Will Be Eliminated for Some
Units Soon if Cuts Continue
32
Other Areas
• Increases in Employee Compensation Not Funded ($140M) — Concessions Expected — 3,000 Jobs at Stake
• Arts Grants Cut 50% $12M• Library Grants Cut 10% 2M• Strategic Fund Cut 12% 5M• Merit Scholarships Cut From $2,500 to $500—
Eventual Savings Nearly $100M
33
FY2005 Outlook—General Fund
• Revenue Growth Still Constrained by Tax Cuts
--Remaining Income Tax Cut $43M
--Estate Tax Eliminated-Federal Tax Reform 55M
--Federal Dividend Elimination??? 95M
Total $193M Growth also must cover $42 Million of One-time Revenues
• 4 Percent Growth Produces About $350M
34
General Fund Structural DeficitIs It Eliminated?
• One More Year of Very Constrained Budgets Will Be Needed
• Pressures For Spending (Cost) Increases (e.g. Health Care, Corrections) are Likely to Outpace Revenue Growth
• Only Fundamental Structural Changes Will Solve the Problem-Revenue Structure-Program Responsibilities Federal/State
35
FY2005 Outlook—School AidState Perspective
• Revenue Growth Must Cover $299 Million of One-time Revenues
• 4 Percent Growth Produces About $440 Million
• Small Spending Increase Possible — Roughly One Percent
• Increased Retirement Contribution Percentage May Be Required —
10+ Percent Increase in Rate
36
FY2005 Outlook—School AidLocal Perspective
• Increased Retirement Contribution Percentage could claim entire increase
in State Funding• Pressures on Health Insurance Premiums
will continue• Another Year of Austerity
37
The Next Steps
“The Governor Proposes and The Legislature Disposes” — Senator Harry Gast, Appropriations Chair for 18 Years
• It Is Now The Legislature’s Turn
• Will It Be A Long Hot Summer?
38
Citizens Research Council
of Michigan
Citizens Research Council
of Michigan www.crcmich.orgwww.crcmich.org
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