In an unusual move that
underscored the highly politicized nature of the state budget, Brown
took to YouTube on Saturday to deliver the bad news: the state's
projected budget deficit for the fiscal year starting July 1 is now $16
billion, up from the $9 billion anticipated in January.
On Monday, Brown will hold a news conference to detail the new budget deficit and how he intends to close it.
California, whose economy
is the largest in the nation and would rank ninth in the world if the
state were a country, has struggled for decades with a tax system in
which property tax increases are limited by law and tax hikes of any
kind must be approved by voter initiatives or a two-thirds vote of the
legislature.
The deeper deficit
forecast reflects the state's uneven economic recovery: tax collections
this year have fallen about $4 billion below projections, though many
state legislators and economists had warned that the January revenue
estimates were far too optimistic.
The deficit also grew
because some previously agreed cuts to state social programs, including
the Medi-Cal healthcare program for low-income families and seniors,
were either delayed by legislators or blocked by the courts and federal
officials.
Brown's video had the air of a campaign call for a tax hike initiative that is the centerpiece of his fiscal plan.
"What I'm proposing is not
a panacea. But it goes a long way toward cleaning up the state's budget
mess," he said. He acknowledged that further budget cuts would be
needed as well, but added: "we can't fill a hole of this magnitude with
cuts alone without doing severe damage to our schools."
The measure would
temporarily raise California's sales tax to 7.5 percent from 7.25
percent and increase personal income tax rates on a sliding scale
starting at annual income of $250,000. Incomes of $1 million and above
would see a 3 percentage-point bump, pushing the top rate to 13.3
percent. The measure would raise $9 billion for the next fiscal year
The state will spend about
$86.5 billion this year, down from a peak of $103 billion in the
2007-2008 fiscal year. Brown in January proposed $92.6 billion in
general fund spending for the next fiscal year.
California's budget
watchdog agency warned in February that Brown's revenue expectations
were optimistic. The more sober forecast this weekend was apparently
prompted by lackluster revenue in April, a critical month for collecting
personal income taxes.
"It's a terrible
recovery," said Mike Genest, one of former Republican Governor Arnold
Schwarzenegger's budget directors. "It seems we're in a cycle of
somewhat lower expectations each time people take another look."
Some pockets of the state's economy, notably the high-tech industry, are doing well.
This week's initial public
offering of Facebook stock will make millionaires of thousands of
employees and investors. Tax receipts related to the IPO could total
billions of dollars but will likely be collected over time and will not
be sufficient to change the budget outlook.
Much of the state
continues to struggle in the wake of a real estate collapse. The Central
Valley city of Stockton is in talks with its creditors to try to avert
filing for bankruptcy. continue Reading
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