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A
Blind Eye
Assessing New York's 1999-2000 Executive Budget in Economic, Social
and Fiscal Context
Fiscal
Policy Institute
One Lear Jet Lane
Latham, New York 12110
518-786-3156
fpi@albany.net
The Fiscal Policy
Institute wishes to thank the Ford and Charles Stewart Mott Foundations
for their support of the state fiscal analysis work that makes this
briefing book, and the briefings at which it is being presented,
possible. It also wishes to thank the many labor, religious, human
services, community and other organizations that support, disseminate
and promote its analytical work, with additional thanks to CSEA
for the printing of this briefing book.
March 1999
The following
pages provide the text from our annual analysis of the Executive
Budget. If you would like the printed version of the full 53 page
report which includes numerous graphs and charts, please contact
us at the Fiscal Policy Institute.
A
Blind Eye
- The 1999-2000
Executive Budget turns a blind eye to the major challenges and
opportunities facing New York State, failing to even recognize
them - let alone to address them.
- Instead it
repeats misleading platitudes in an attempt to have New Yorkers
view the state of their state through rose colored glasses.
- Rather than
acknowledging that the upstate New York economy is floundering,
the administration trumpets statewide job creation numbers which
sound significant, but when put into context are not significant
by historical standards.
- The Wall
Street boom is benefiting the state treasury but those resources,
while they last, should be invested in programs and services that
strengthen the state's economy for the long haul and make it easier
rather than harder for people to move up the socioeconomic ladder.
New York's Economic Story in the 1990s - 10 Themes
- While 1998
saw some improvement, the state's recovery is still weak compared
to earlier periods.
- Tax cuts
have not boosted the economy.
- NYS still
lags most urban industrial states.
- Growth has
been concentrated downstate.
- Manufacturing-dependent
upstate has been stagnant.
- While there
has been some growth in middle income jobs in media, entertainment
and computers - much of the job growth has been low-wage and tens
of thousands of middle income jobs have been lost.
- Proportionately
more of New York's population has left the state in the 1990s
than in any other state and many regions also have seen net declines.
- Both the
NYC and NYS economies have been heavily dependent on a volatile
Wall Street sector.
- Income inequality
has intensified, not only because the rich have gotten richer,
but because both the poor and the middle class have seen their
real incomes decline.
- The outlook
is for national and state economic and employment growth to slow
over the next 2 years.
The truth is that the tax cuts have NOT boosted the states
economy.
- New Yorks
growth has been slower than that of the rest of the US.
- New York
has not done as well in this recovery relative to the nation as
a whole as it did in the 1980s (prior to the big tax cuts).
- The growth
that has occurred in NYS is largely due to the Wall Street boom
and is concentrated in the NYC metropolitan area.
- Tax cuts
have not been a factor in the Wall Street boom.
- The tax cuts
have not averted the stagnation of the upstate economy. Upstate
New York has been the worst performing major region in the country
during the current expansion.
- In fact,
the tax cuts take more money out of the economy than they pump
back into it. The personal income tax cuts require $4.8 billion
less in infrastructure, health care, education and other important
investments each year, but only half of that amount stays in the
New York economy. The rest goes to the federal treasury and nonresidents,
or is spent on goods and services produced outside the state.
The drop in the unemployment rate is due in part to a decline in
the labor force.
- While the
state's unemployment rate has been declining (from 6.1% in December
1997 to 5.5% in December 1998), for some major areas, a shrinking
labor force explains the drop in the unemployment rate.
- In the Rochester
metro area, unemployment fell from 4% in December 1997 to 3.6%
in December 1998, yet resident employment also declined by 5,500
over that12-month period. The labor force fell by 8,100 over that
period, because people either dropped out of the labor force (possibly
because they became too discouraged), or they left the area.
- Similarly,
in the Buffalo area, unemployment fell from 5.2% to 4.5%, but
resident employment dropped by 5,000 and the labor force fell
by 9,400 people.
The net effect of job shifts has been to erode the middle class.
- There has
been some growth in middle income jobs, e.g., New York City has
gained 75,000 jobs in media, entertainment, computers and professional
services betweem1992 and 1998.
- However,
over 200,000 middle income jobs have been lost statewide over
that period, including: manufacturing (-98,000 jobs), banking
(-41,000 jobs), public and private hospitals (-37,000 jobs), and
other government (-30,000 jobs).
- Much of the
job growth has been in low-wage industries such as retailing,
social services, and temporary help services.
- Increasingly,
jobs are not providing health insurance benefits: the number of
uninsured is rising rapidly in New York and nearly half of the
uninsured adults work year-round.
What accounts for the decline in total wage income?
- Several regions
were hard hit by the loss of high-paying manufacturing jobs: Long
Island, Hudson Valley, Mohawk Valley, Southern Tier, and Central
New York (Syracuse area).
- Several thousand
jobs have been lost in middle income positions in banking, hospitals
and government.
- Although
New York City has had the strongest increase in real wages and
salaries since 1989, gains have been heavily concentrated among
high earners on Wall Street and in corporate headquarters.
- Across the
state, much of the job growth has been in low-wage industries.
More
people leave New York than anywhere else.
- From 1990-1998,
net domestic out-migration has been proportionately greater from
New York than from any other state.
- 1.7 million
more people - 9.6% of the 1990 population - have left New York
in the 1990s than have migrated to the State from other parts
of the U.S.
- New York
would have suffered a large net population loss were it not for
over 1 million (net) foreign immigrants, the most for any state
except for California.
The drop in the unemployment rate is due in part to a decline in
the labor force.
- While the
State's unemployment rate has been declining (from 6.1% in December1997
to 5.5% in December1998), for some major areas, a shrinking labor
force explains the drop in the unemployment rate.
- In the Rochester
metro area, unemployment fell from 4% in December 1998 to 3.6%
in December 1998, yet resident employment also declined by 5,500
over that 12-month period. The labor force fell by 8,100 over
that period, because people either dropped out of the labor force
(possibly because they became too discouraged), or they left the
area.
- Similarly,
in the Buffalo area, unemployment fell from 5.2% to 4.5%, but
resident employment dropped by 5,000 and the labor force fell
by 9,400 people.
New York City's growth in the 1990s has been weaker, more dependent
on Wall Street and less diversified than in the 1980s expansion.
- For comparable
5-year periods, real earnings grew by $38 billion in the 1983-88
period compared to $22 billion over the 1992-97 period ($1997).
- Wall Street
accounted for over half of the growth in real earnings in the
1990s expansion period vs. 23% in the 1980s expansion.
- During the
1980s expansion, 8 sectors had 5%+ shares of earnings growth,
while in the 1990s, only 4 sectors have had shares of 5% or greater.
Despite its high poverty rates and great wage and income inequality,
New York maintains a regressive state-local tax system.
- A progressive
tax system is one in which the portion of a household's
income that goes to taxes increases as its income increases.
- A regressive
tax system is one in which that portion decreases as one's income
increases. In other words, a regressive tax system is one in which
wealthy households pay a smaller share of their incomes in taxes
than do lower income households.
- A proportional
tax system is one in which all households, regardless of their
income levels, pay about the same portion of their incomes in
taxes.
- While it
is interesting to note if an individual tax is regressive, proportional,
or progressive, the more important question is whether the tax
system as a whole is regressive, proportional, or progressive.
For most states, the question is whether or not the progressivity
of its personal and corporate income taxes and its estate tax
balance out the regressivity of its consumption, excise and property
taxes.
Are the Pataki tax cuts stimulating the economy?
- While New
York State's income tax cuts do not pass muster on fairness grounds,
they also raise questions about the efficacy of tax cutting as
an economic development strategy.
- New York's
economic growth over the last several years has been concentrated
in the New York City metropolitan area and is more related to
the boom on Wall Street than to state tax policy.
- If it were
not for the Wall Street boom, New York's rate of job growth would
be even further below the national average than it has been. We
must take off our blinders and acknowledge that because of federal
deductibility and other leakages, the tax cuts are very likely
taking more money out of the state's economy than they are putting
back into it.
- Because of
their size, the tax cuts are also forcing significant reductions
in services such as health care, education and transit which diminish
the state's economic viability in the long run in addition to
their immediate effects.
Why is the 1999-2000 Executive Budget proposing $1.3 billion in
budget cuts when New York State has a multi-billion surplus?
- Governor
Pataki's 1999-2000 Executive Budget proposal projects that New
York State will end its current fiscal year, on March 31, 1999,
with a surplus of $1.789 billion dollars. Some observers anticipate
an even greater surplus.
- At the same
time, however, the Governor is proposing budget cuts that will
reduce state expenditures by $1.3 billion during 1999-2000. If
implemented as recommended by the Governor, these budget cuts
are projected to reduce state expenditures by about $2 billion
during the 2000-2001 state fiscal year.
- This year's
spending cuts are necessary to finance this year's new tax cuts,
to make a contribution to the financing of next year's new tax
cuts, and to somehow atone for last year's budget growing at greater
than the rate of inflation.
- The $1.789
billion surplus is being rolled over to subsequent fiscal years
to make a further contribution to financing those tax cuts.
Is there a better way?
- The key problem
that New York State faces in balancing its budget in an intelligent
manner is that the cost of the new tax cuts scheduled to take
effect in 1999-2000 ($1.8 billion) account for 90% of the underlying
revenue growth expected during that period.
- For 2000-2001
the problem is more severe, with the cost of that year's additional
tax reductions ($2.1 billion) actually exceeding by a significant
amount the underlying revenue growth ($1.3 billion) being projected
by the Division of the Budget for that year.
- While the
Governor's plan to roll over the $1.789 billion surplus to 2000-2001
papers over that year's underlying budget gap a little, as does
the $700 million tail on this year's proposed budget cuts, an
additional $1.6 billion in new budget cuts will have to be made
next year if the state does not act now to restructure the tax
cuts currently scheduled to take effect in the next several years.
Yes, New York State can achieve structural balance without counterproductive
service reductions.
- The change
in the STAR plan being recommended by the Governor in the Executive
Budget (to go from using overall equalization rates to using residential
equalization rates) shows that the administration is finally beginning
to acknowledge that there are fundamental problems inherent in
a program that provides property tax relief based on some overall
county and school district averages rather than on the basis of
the property taxes actually paid by homeowners relative to their
incomes.
- This recognition
should open the door to a more fundamental retargeting of STAR
that ensures that it provides relief to those who need it without
giving relief to those who do not. A greatly expanded circuit
breaker can provide more relief to those who truly need it at
half or less of the overall cost of the current STAR program.
- Realistic
reassessments must also be made of both existing and proposed
tax preferences for business and or the recent and proposed personal
income tax cuts.
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