• Research Report

    House’s Budget Bubble: Conference Last Chance for Fiscal Responsibility

    posted June 20, 2005 by Joseph Coletti
    Although state revenue estimates are growing at the rate of about $100 million each month, the North Carolina House managed to pass a $17.1 billion budget that requires even higher taxes than the Senate’s bill. Spending would grow 7.5 percent. Despite this, some representatives claim that the budget is a model of fiscal responsibility because it ties recurring funds to recurring obligations. Fiscal responsibility does not require $778 million in new taxes or $376 million in transfers and new fees. “Reverse logrolling” in the conference is the last best hope for the General Assembly to become responsible.
  • Research Report

    Bad Budget Habits Return: Senate Plan Would Repeat 1990s Spending Trend

    posted May 30, 2005 by Joseph Coletti
    Under the Senate’s proposed budget, real spending in the state will grow as quickly over the three years through fiscal year 2007, 13.2 percent, as it did in the three years through FY 2001. The late 1990s benefited from rapid economic growth that allowed the state to cut taxes while spending more. Gov. Mike Easley raised taxes to cover expenses while slowing growth to 0.2 percent in real terms through FY2003-04. Since then, the higher taxes have paid for renewed spending growth. Medicaid spending has expanded more rapidly than education or correction and is accelerating. Growth is faster still outside this core.
  • Research Report

    Government Costs Grow: NC to Spend Over $4,000 per Person in FY2006-07

    posted May 10, 2005 by Joseph Coletti
    The budget proposals from the senate and governor return North Carolina to a path of rapid spending growth. Education and Medicaid continue to expand, but economic development joins them as an important growth area. Government spending on a per capita basis retreated after Fiscal Year 1999-2000, but will be 28 percent higher in FY2006-07 than it was in FY2002-03.
  • Research Report

    Not Enough Bright Spots: Senate Budget Hides Hopeful Measures

    posted May 4, 2005 by Joseph Coletti
    Senators deserve a great deal of credit for decisions in their proposed budget to limit dual eligibility for Medicaid and Medicare, reduce the number of teacher assistants in public schools, and remove General Fund support for some activities that should rely on receipts. These changes do not reflect an overall return to fiscal reationality, however. The Senate still increases spending by $1 billion, paid for with fund transfers and big tax hikes.
  • Press Release

    Alternative State Budget Released

    posted May 1, 2005
    RALEIGH — As the North Carolina Senate prepared to release elements of a spending plan for 2005-07, the John Locke Foundation offered its own alternative Monday that avoids any new…
  • Research Report

    Freedom Budget 2005: Principled and Pragmatic

    posted May 1, 2005 by Joseph Coletti
    Freedom Budget 2005 continues the tradition of JLF alternative budgets that revise the governor’s Continuation and Expansion budgets. If an item is not included here, the authors accept the governor’s proposal. This includes all pay raises for state employees and some tax changes. The specific recommendations detailed in this report are made as additions or subtractions from Gov. Easley’s budget.
  • Research Report

    C’s are for Taxes: Temporary Taxes Yield Lower Grades

    posted March 7, 2005 by Joseph Coletti
    The state of North Carolina and our governor, Mike Easley, received mediocre grades on two recent report cards. Tax increases that were to be temporary when passed in 2001, but which continue in the governor's budget through at least 2006, contribute to the low grades. The additional tax bracket and half-cent sales tax will have added nearly $1.9 billion between their original sunset and July 2007, while Gov. Easley's additional taxes will bring almost as much in FY2006-07 alone.
  • Research Report

    New Year, New Taxes: Governor Seeks Nearly $1 Billion in New Spending

    posted February 24, 2005 by Joseph Coletti
    Governor Mike Easley says his budget for the 2005-2007 biennium is the model of fiscal prudence, but the numbers belie this. Spending increases nearly $1 billion to $16.9 billion. The governor claims $200 million in spending cuts, but they are far outweighed by the $741 billion in higher taxes. Tobacco Trust Fund transfers and unreserved credit balance close the rest of the $1.1 billion structural deficit. The General Assembly will need to be more forthright if it is to put real restraints on government growth.
  • Press Release

    Easley Budget By the Numbers

    posted February 22, 2005
    RALEIGH — Gov. Mike Easley’s proposed state budget uses higher taxes to close the vast majority of an $1.1 billion budget deficit, itself created primarily by the governor’s proposed new…
  • Research Report

    The Budget Untouchables: Increased Spending Overwhelms Reported Cuts

    posted February 20, 2005 by Joseph Coletti
    Despite a $1.3 billion deficit, Gov. Mike Easley will propose up to 6 percent higher spending in his 2005-06 budget, even with small proposed savings in most agencies. Medicaid and education spending have grown rapidly, and will continue apace. Instead, the governor plans to keep the temporary half-cent sales tax and add a large cigarette tax to pay for higher spending. This is no way to address what the Fiscal Research Division calls a structural budget deficit.

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