“Consider
everything that feeds the creation of public policy. There’re lobbyists,
rallies, and marches. Don't forget charged rhetoric, clever spin, campaign
contributions, and the ever-popular backroom deal. Then there’s ideological
talking heads spewing misinformation to support their world view. Not to
mention the constant pressure on legislators to garner some short-term
political advantage to use in the next election cycle. The one, critical
element missing from all this chaos: long-term planning.
“The political process
simply does not reward politicians for proposing long-term solutions to complex
problems — especially when those solutions come with short-term costs. Which
explains why Illinois’ fiscal shortcomings have been so intractable. After all,
resolving fiscal issues requires, among other things, an honest, public debate
about tax policy, which is about as rare as a Super Bowl victory for the Bears.
“Rather than engage in such meaningful
discourse, there’s been a pervasive — some would say perverse — tendency of
most politicians (Governor Pritzker excepted) to eschew long-term, tax policy
issues, to instead focus on getting through ‘fiscal year now.’ And that’s had
some frighteningly bad consequences, not the least of which is the structural
deficit in Illinois’ General Fund.
“A ‘structural deficit’ exists when, even during normal
economies, and when no services are added or expanded, revenue growth doesn’t
cover the cost of providing the same level of public services from one fiscal
year into the next, adjusting solely for inflation. The structural deficit in
Illinois’ General Fund has persisted for generations. Which is no Bueno, given
that over 95 percent of all General Fund spending on services goes to the core
areas of education, healthcare, social services, and public safety.
“Unfortunately, eliminating the structural
deficit necessitates modernizing the tax system to generate adequate revenue
growth — which is something the political process strongly discourages. So in
lieu of that, Illinois decision makers have relied on the irresponsible
practice of diverting revenue that should’ve funded pensions, to instead
maintain spending on services despite structural deficit induced revenue
shortfalls. Sure, that allowed Illinois to provide a level of public services
it didn’t have the revenue to fund, but it also meant the state was hiding the
structural deficit by borrowing billions of dollars from what should have been
contributed into the pension systems.
“Then to make matters worse, in 1995 Illinois
enacted the ‘pension ramp,’ which created a 50-year plan for repaying the
immense pension debt it was incurring. The pension ramp, however, was a
boondoggle. It established a repayment schedule that, for its first 15 years,
continued the practice of underfunding the pensions by tens of billions.
Thereafter it called for annual repayments of pension debt that were so unaffordable
back-loaded, they increased annually by increments which exceed both inflation
and general fund revenue growth.
“The deleterious impact of Illinois’ structural deficit is laid
bare by the fiscal year 2022 general fund budget enacted last month.
Consider that this budget increases spending on the four core services by $586
million — or just 0.13 percent — over fiscal year 2021 levels. Sure the
bump is small, but things have to be trending up to cover any increase at all,
right? Well, no, actually.
“As it turns out, that year-to-year increase in general fund
spending is less than the $655 million in new revenue the state raised this
year by eliminating some corporate tax breaks — and significantly less than the
$3.8 billion in federal pandemic relief being utilized in fiscal
year 2022. See, under President Biden’s American Rescue Plan Act, as well
as other previous federal initiatives, Illinois is receiving $12 billion to
cover general fund expenditures over fiscal years 2021 through 2024.
“Which is great, except this federal assistance is one-time
revenue that’s not available after fiscal year 2024. So come fiscal
year 2025, Illinois faces a huge fiscal cliff that threatens its capacity
to maintain spending on any of the four core services, unless before that
fateful day, decision makers finally enact the tax policy reforms needed to
eliminate the structural deficit and create a rational repayment plan for the
state’s pension debt” -Ralph Martire
Ralph Martire is executive director of the Center for Tax and
Budget Accountability, a bipartisan fiscal policy think tank, and the Arthur
Rubloff professor of public policy at Roosevelt University. rmartire@ctbaonline.org
The State Journal-Register
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