State Tax Revenue Continues to Plunge





Bloomberg: U.S. state tax collections tumbled the most in almost half a century in the second quarter as the economic recession curbed levies on incomes and sales.

The 16.6 percent plunge was the biggest since at least 1963, the Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government said today. For the 12 months to June 30, the fiscal year for most states, revenue declined 8.2 percent, or $63 billion, about twice what states got from the $787 billion U.S. economic stimulus package, the institute said.

State revenue has dwindled for two straight quarters and continued to decline in July and August, the Albany-based research organization said. Budgets for the year that began July 1 already face $26 billion of deficits, the Washington, D.C.- based Center on Budget and Policy Priorities said Aug. 12, forcing state lawmakers to confront additional spending cuts.

“We’re looking at a multiyear problem hitting essentially every state,” Robert Ward, the institute’s deputy director, told reporters. “It has happened during recessions before, but the depth of this decline is unprecedented in modern times.”

My comment: I look at this as a two edged sword. The government may be losing revenue but as I am a net tax payer and not a payee I look at the fact the government is running short of revenue as a good thing. That is less mischief they can be involved in.

John Polomny
The Real Deal

More on this topic (What's this?) Read more on Taxes, at Wikinvest
Sign Up for JutiaGroup Underground and Receive Handpicked Stories Delivered to Your Inbox!!

Random Posts

Post a Response

  • Polls

    How Has The U.S. Recession Affected You?

    View Results

    Loading ... Loading ...
  • Improve the web with Nofollow Reciprocity.