• Research Report

    Budgeting on Borrowed Time: FY 2009 budget has excessive spending, no saving, and a lot more debt

    posted August 5, 2008 by Joseph Coletti
    The North Carolina General Assembly approved a $21.4 billion budget for fiscal year (FY) 2009, up 3.4 percent from FY 2008, with $21.2 billion in appropriations for operating expenses, up 4.0 percent. As usual, the final budget was prepared behind closed doors by the House Speaker and President Pro Tem of the Senate with minimal involvement from all but a dozen legislators of either party and little opportunity for the public or other legislators to review spending proposals before a final vote.
  • Research Report

    Budget Progress and Regress: Better budget ideas from N.C. Senate, but a worse budget

    posted June 22, 2008 by Joseph Coletti
    The North Carolina Senate approved $21.2 billion in appropriations for operating expenses in fiscal year (FY) 2009, which would be a 3.9 percent increase from FY 2008, which ends June 30. Senators would add $135 million in capital spending and $672 million in debt that would not face voter approval. Total appropriations would be 3.4 percent higher than in FY 2008.
  • Press Release

    JLF analyst sees need for state budget pruning

    posted June 18, 2008
    RALEIGH – Final state budget negotiations could produce a document that’s more fiscally responsible than either the House or Senate budget plans, according to analysis by a John Locke…
  • Research Report

    N.C. House’s FY 2009 Budget: Smaller than the governor’s, but not any better

    posted June 16, 2008 by Joseph Coletti
    The North Carolina House passed a $21.35 billion budget for fiscal year (FY) 2009, with $21.18 billion for continuing operations, which would be increases of 3.3 percent and 3.7 percent, respectively, from FY2008. Teachers would receive an average 3.0 percent pay increase and state employees 2.75 percent. Those raises would total $367 million.
  • Press Release

    House budget ignores structural problems

    posted June 4, 2008
    RALEIGH – The N.C. House’s proposed $21.2 billion state operations budget spends too much money on unproven ideas, overspends one-time money for long-term expenses, and sets up future legislatures for…
  • Research Report

    Saving, Spending and Taxing: Governor proposes $1 billion in new operating appropriations

    posted May 13, 2008 by Joseph Coletti
    Gov. Easley proposed $21.4 billion in state appropriations for continuing operations in fiscal year 2009, up $1 billion (4.9 percent) from the final budget for fiscal year 2008. Combined pay increases, including one-time bonuses, for teachers and state employees total $594 million. Less than a fifth of the $400 million in spending reductions are much more than reclaiming money that would not otherwise be spent.
  • Research Report

    Next Come the Taxes: Spending growth continues in latest budget

    posted August 22, 2007 by Joseph Coletti
    Gov. Mike Easley and the General Assembly continue the spend-and-tax cycle, increasing the General Fund $1.8 billion, 9.5 percent, over last year. General Fund spending on operations reaches $20.7 billion in FY 2007-08, a 43 percent increase in just five years, similar to the five-year period through FY1997-98.
  • Press Release

    N.C. House budget increases spending, taxes

    posted May 14, 2007
    RALEIGH – State senators could avoid $207 million in new taxes and fees tied to the N.C. House’s state budget plan, while cutting spending and addressing more budget priorities. That’s…
  • Research Report

    Freedom Budget 2007

    posted April 23, 2007 by Joseph Coletti
    Freedom Budget 2007 continues the tradition of John Locke Foundation alternative budgets that revise the governor’s Continuation and Expansion budgets.

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