State’s budget future grim

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He didn’t come out and say it, but Gov. Pat Quinn has apparently abandoned his promise to allow the “temporary” income tax hikes to expire 3 years from now.

The governor submitted a 3-year revenue and spending projection last week as he’s required to do by a new Illinois law. The bottom line of Quinn’s projection is that revenues are simply not high enough to match what Quinn wants to spend. According to the governor’s projections, the state will finish this fiscal year with a $507 million deficit, despite the recent tax hikes.

Overall, Quinn wants to reduce the state’s operating budget by 7 percent next fiscal year, but much of that “cut” is actually a $400 million decrease in the availability of what is known as “salvage” money, or unspent appropriations. Quinn then projects no more cuts or increases in the operating budget through 2015.

The governor also believes he can keep health care spending flat for the next 3 years. The Senate Republicans say those projections are way off the mark. Health care inflation is rampant. The Republicans say Medicaid spending alone will have to rise by $2 billion to $3 billion over the next few years to keep pace with current laws. The governor wants to change some laws, but that would mean reducing payouts to providers (doctors and hospitals have powerful lobbyists) and kicking people off coverage and making them pay more during worldwide economic hardships. Not easy, to say the least.

Quinn’s proposed cuts are outmatched by pension spending, which will continue to increase by leaps and bounds. Years of underfunding the systems and a 1990s-era law that delayed dealing with the problem have combined to squeeze the budget hard.

And then we arrive at fiscal year 2015, when, the governor projects, the state will have a budget deficit of $818 million. As the Senate Republicans point out with their health care spending projections, that figure could be way low.

It wasn’t in his report, but Quinn’s projected deficit will double the very next year because most of the income tax increase is set to expire in January 2015, exactly halfway through the 2015 fiscal year.

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