• Press Release

    Taxpayers should reap benefits from surplus

    posted June 12, 2006
    RALEIGH – N.C. legislators should close the books on two “temporary” taxes, now that those taxes have helped generate a $2.4 billion state budget surplus. That’s a key finding in…
  • Research Report

    Freedom Budget 2006: Providing Relief to North Carolina’s Counties and Taxpayers

    posted June 12, 2006 by Joseph Coletti
    Economic growth has given the General Assembly $2.4 billion more to spend. Higher sales and income taxes have contributed to this surplus. The Senate adds $1.4 billion in new spending, and relies on nonrecurring revenues for $400 million in new recurring obligations. Drawing on the John Locke Foundation’s Freedom Budget 2005, this paper offers an alternative budget that would end the sales tax and income tax increases from 2001, eliminate Medicaid’s burden on counties, and keep spending growth to 4.3 percent – all within the limit of population growth and inflation.
  • Research Report

    Changing Course III: An Alternative Budget for North Carolina

    posted February 28, 2001 by Don Carrington, John Hood
    The 1995 session of the General Assembly was unique in the history of North Carolina. After years of rapidly increasing state spending, both Gov. Hunt and the legislature expressed an interest in controlling spending growth and cutting taxes. As a result, operating spending grew by only 1.4 percent in FY 1995-96, by far the slowest rate of spending growth in a non-recession year this century.

alternative budget by Author