North Carolina to end year with $400 million surplus

Published May 7, 2015

by Mark Binker, WRAL, May 6, 2015.

North Carolina will reap $400 million more from taxpayers than anticipated when the fiscal year ends on June 30, Gov. Pat McCrory and top legislative leaders reported Wednesday.

The consensus revenue report is especially good news given that as recently as March, revenue projections showed the state would end the year with a slight deficit. The extra cushion will give lawmakers padding to put more money into salaries and tax breaks as they begin to craft the state budget this month.

"Like anything else, both good news and bad news, I don't think it's right that politicians try to claim credit for all of it. A lot of it is the fact the economy is improving," House Speaker  said. "But I do think the changes we made have helped. The tax reform, the focusing on economic development have played a part in it."

Moore, McCrory and others were careful not to, in their words, "spike the ball," even through they were obviously pleased that revenue projections had swung around. While no set of numbers will silence critics, legislative leaders say the surplus shows a 2013 tax reform package is having the desired impact.

Democratic leaders argued Wednesday that the $400 million boon to the state government came out of the paychecks of average families while higher paid workers and corporations saw their taxes go down.

"What about the rest of North Carolina? What about working families? What do they get out of this?" Rep. , D-Durham asked.

But Republicans insisted everyone was benefiting.

"Chicken Littles on the left loudly cried North Carolina would lose so much tax revenue that students wouldn’t have teachers, roads wouldn’t be built and our universities might have to close," Senate President Pro Tempore , R-Rockingham, said. "But far from starving state government, tax cuts and tax reform have spurred economic growth and job creation."

With a surplus in hand, politicians set to work laying out what they would like to do with the extra cushion. Legislative leaders must build a new, roughly $21.5 billion state budget by June 30, the end of the fiscal year.

In addition to putting more money away for a rainy day, McCrory told the N.C. Association of County Commissioners that he would like to put some more money into targeted raises for state employees. And, McCrory said, he would like to reinstate a tax credit for seniors that allowed them to deduct medical expenses from their taxes and reinstate tax credits that help cities reuse historic factory and warehouse buildings.

Moore mentioned those priorities as well, singling out the same two tax credits as well as a promise to raise starting state-paid teacher salaries to $35,000.

"We're going to keep our promise to new teachers and do something for other state employees, not just teachers. State government is only as effective as its employees," Moore said.

Some of the money in the surplus is already spoken for. State law would take about a quarter of the surplus for reserves and the fund used to repair state buildings.

The surplus also triggers lower corporate tax rates build into the 2013 tax reform package. The corporate tax rate will drop from 5 percent to 4 percent this year, which translates into roughly $109 million less for state coffers. The following year, the corporate tax rate will drop to 3 percent, pulling nearly $350 million from state revenues.

State Budget Director Lee Roberts said the lower tax rates were already built into future revenue projections.

"It's in the context of very strong revenue growth," Roberts said.

But the coming drop in corporate taxes was a target for Democratic critics, who said the state could be setting itself up to cut revenue without really understanding why there was a surplus this year. Sen. , D-Wake, argued that stock sales or other sorts of profit-taking could have given income tax collections a momentary jolt that would fade away by next year.

And Blue argued that taxpayers felt the pinch of the new tax rates this year in the form of lower refunds.

"On April 15, people realized they were paying more than taxes than they were before," Blue said.

That's not entirely true. When the tax changes were put into effect, new withholding guidelines meant that people would pay less with each paycheck. However, that meant smaller refunds or for those who did not adjust how much was withheld from their paycheck, a tax owed to the state. Others did see their taxes go up, particularly people who relied on specific tax breaks that were eliminated, such as the medical tax deduction.

"That was always going to be a part of tax reform," Roberts said of how the refunds panned out this year.

Read more at http://www.wral.com/north-carolina-to-end-year-with-surplus/14627150/#wgubsJSIrG14uuvP.99

May 7, 2015 at 6:45 am
Richard L Bunce says:

The bad news is the State government has confiscated more of the income of NC residents than expected... the worst news is the NC Legislature plans to spend the extra revenue. The good news is all the hand wringers about Income Tax revenue after tax rate reductions were just flat wrong... and will be again.