California has dueling budget deficits. Here’s what that means and what lawmakers could cut [The Sacramento Bee]
Is it
The Legislative Analyst’s Office last week threw yet another wrench into Gov. Gavin Newsom’s push for a rosier fiscal picture when it updated its projected budget deficit to
This is the latest in a series of dueling budget estimates the governor’s administration and the LAO have put forward since December.
The LAO in late 2023 projected the state would see a
Then, on Tuesday, the LAO issued the
That is not entirely strange — the
What has been different is Newsom’s insistence that it was wrong for journalists and observers to take the LAO’s bigger estimate “as gospel,” setting up a continuing comparison between the two.
“We have a difference of opinion in the short run, versus the long run,” Newsom said in January, adding, “We just are a little less pessimistic than they are about next year.”
So where does a budget gap that’s
Here’s what all this means for the next few months of budget negotiations.
LAO vs. Newsom
One of the biggest differences between Newsom’s projections and LAO’s estimates is whether
Newsom’s office considers that spending reduction to be baseline, while the LAO considers it a policy choice for lawmakers and the governor to make while crafting the 2024-25 budget.
“We take this approach in order to provide the Legislature visibility into the full scope of the administration’s choices,” the LAO said in its
Palmer emphasized the state still has some revenue runway left.
“From now through April, more than
“I think the challenge for them from a governance perspective is that I think many people had hoped that January’s projections would actually improve by May because 2023 was, relatively speaking, a good year for the stock market,” he said. “And right now, this early this year, the arrows are pointing in the other direction, which means they potentially have a bigger budget problem to solve than they thought even a month ago.”
Possible spending solutions
Palmer said the Legislature should move on early action budget measures “needed for
That means Assembly Speaker
“Conversations about early action are already underway,” said
First, the Legislature needs to approve the increase, which has to go to the
Assembly Budget Committee Chair
When asked whether the LAO’s update changes anything, he said, “not in a profound way.”
“We’ve understood that this is a moment of uncertainty from the beginning and that things could change quickly,” Gabriel said. “And that’s something we’ve been prepared for.”
As for the LAO, the group identified several one-time or temporary spending cuts that could be made to address the budget shortfall from fiscal year 2023-24 through 2025-26.
That includes
Although Newsom has been staunchly opposed to raising taxes, Hoene suggested it may be time to consider some revenue solutions to prevent “cutting services to the bone.”
“It’s not unprecedented to do so,” he said. ”In prior recessions, state leaders have temporarily suspended tax breaks, kind of imposed tax changes that produce revenues on a temporary basis to help get through these periods.”
©2024 The Sacramento Bee. Visit sacbee.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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