Illinois' Budget Deficit

The Civic Federation’s Institute for Illinois’ Fiscal Sustainability released its analysis of the enacted FY2012 State budget on Monday.

The report found that the spending plan will increase Illinois’ total general operating deficit to $5 billion by June 2012. The shortfall would be even larger if the State had not significantly underfunded Medicaid costs and business tax refunds.

The $5 billion projected year-end General Funds deficit includes an accumulated deficit from prior years of $4.6 billion and a FY2012 operating gap between revenues and expenditures of $454 million. However, FY2012 Medicaid costs are underfunded by as much as $1.7 billion. A loophole in the State’s budgetary law allows lawmakers to pay FY2012 Medicaid expenses in FY2013, effectively pushing current year expenditures off into the next fiscal year.

The FY2012 budget also does not set aside enough income tax revenue to pay down a backlog of refunds that Illinois owes to businesses, thus boosting the amount of revenue the State can spend on its operations.

Illinois is expected to end FY2012 with $5.5 billion in unpaid bills to vendors and local governments. An additional multi-billion dollar payment backlog exists that is related to business tax refunds, employee and retiree health care and Medicaid.

“While the budget process was somewhat improved this year, The Civic Federation cannot say the State of Illinois is better off,” said Civic Federation President Laurence Msall. “By the end of FY2012, the State will have a payment backlog that could require over $8 billion in State money to pay off. The State’s finances have not been fixed.”

While the State has decreased agency appropriations by $298 million or 1.2 percent since FY2008, these efforts were more than offset by an increase in pension contributions of $1.98 billion and increased debt service costs of $1.14 billion on pension obligation bonds over the same time period.

Fully 17.4 percent of the General Funds budget of $33.6 billion in FY2012 will go to pension-related payments.

“This budget plainly demonstrates the need for further pension reform by the State of Illinois,” said Msall. “Neither dramatic increases in revenue nor painful cuts to appropriations were enough to offset the increased costs imposed on the State by its underfunded pensions.”

The Civic Federation continues to urge the General Assembly and Gov. Quinn to explore changes to pension benefits not yet earned by current employees as a way to reduce the cost of the pension program and set Illinois on a more fiscally sound path.

The full analysis of the FY2012 State of Illinois enacted budget includes a concise summary of over six months of budget negotiations and detailed descriptions of trends associated with the deficit, revenues, expenditures and debt.

For more information on the study, and to read the complete 56-page report, visit the PDF and links below.

Comments

Neighborhood/City: 
Frankfort (Suburbs)

Why is the answer to the budget problems always cutting pensions? It isn't our fault that the state is billions of dollars in debt! We paid into our plans, as per the agreement in our contracts. The state borrowed money from our plans, never paid interest nor have they paid back what they borrowed! And now because the state's leaders have managed our budget poorly for years, we are suppose to sit back and allow the legislators to cut our pensions! The budget deficit is a problem of the entire state! Not just the teachers and other state employees! So to begin solving the problem, cut spending and increase taxes! Too simple, right? The reason the legislators and the governor won't do this is they believe it will be "unfavorable" with their constituents and they might not get re-elected! Poor boys! The answer to the problem is right out there, but you are too selfish to face the facts. It's easier to go after the teacher's pension and other state employees!

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