Budget Watch - Projected Surplus Not As Large As It Seems

It is estimated that the 2016 Florida Legislature will have a budget surplus for FY2016-17, meaning major budget cuts should not be needed and there should be some money left over for new initiatives. After funding a continuation budget, including expected cost increases in current programs and other historically funded items, it is anticipated that there will be $635.4 million (including an allowance for $1 billion in cash reserves) in General Revenue (GR) left over. While this is surely better than the string of multi-billion dollar deficits from FY2008-09 to FY2011-12, the Legislature can only spend a portion of that surplus without creating a deficit in two years.

Highlights:

  • Legislators will have an estimated GR budget surplus of $635.4 million when they develop the state budget for FY2016-17. This is the amount remaining after funding what could be considered a continuation budget. There is a surplus in each of the three years covered by the Long Range Financial Outlook.
  • However, if more than $74.0 million of the FY2016-17 surplus is spent on recurring appropriations, an estimated deficit would occur in the third year (FY2018-19).
  • For the first time, the Outlook assumes there will be tax cuts ($262.6 million) and trust fund sweeps ($237.3 million) in each of the three years. These two items largely offset each other in the first year, but the compound effect of the tax cuts results in a $494.3 million reduction in year three.
  • “Critical needs” will require an additional $664.8 million over the recurring GR base budget in FY2016-17 and “high priority needs” will require and additional $934.2 million. In total, an additional $1.6 billion is needed to fund a continuation budget.
  • Medicaid is the largest budget driver, making up 37.1 percent of all critical and high priority needs.
  • It is assumed the Required Local Effort school property tax millage rate will stay the same. This would produce $428 million from rising property values. This tax increase on local taxpayers would provide 81 percent of the amount need to fund the almost 26,000 new public school students.
  • The Outlook further assumes a 2.4 percent increase in per student funding.
  • The Outlook assumes a GR reserve of only $1 billion. The Legislature has left a larger reserve than that in each of the last five years, ranging from $1.2 billion to $1.6 billion. Any reserve larger than $1 billion would reduce the surplus.

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Economic and Fiscal Impacts of Florida Goodwill Association

Economic and Fiscal Impacts of Florida Goodwill Association

Goodwill’s Economic and Workforce Impact in Florida: FY 2024 quantifies how the Florida Goodwill Association and its nine territories convert donated goods and mission-driven operations into jobs, higher earnings, and stronger local economies across the state. Using FY 2024 operational, employment, and capital spending data and the IMPLAN input-output model, Florida TaxWatch estimates that Goodwill generated $1.52 billion in total economic output, added $893.9 million to Florida’s GDP, and supported 21,471 jobs statewide.

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