Legislature Begins Fiscal Briefings
This week the House and Senate budget committees and the Spending Affordability Committee, which includes legislators, business representatives and citizens, met to discuss the state's fiscal outlook for the upcoming year. This is the first in a series of budget-related meetings that will culminate in the Spending Affordability Committee's recommendations in mid-December for ceilings on state spending levels for FY 2007.
Although the state has a budget surplus on paper of approximately $600 million, state expenditures, particularly in K-12 education and Medicaid, are growing faster than revenues, creating what is termed a �structural deficit.� This structural deficit is expected to be $291 million in FY 2008, and reach $628 million in FY 2009.
The dramatic increase in tax revenues for the last two years should keep the state budget well in the black for the near future, the General Assembly's fiscal committees were told by Department of Legislative Services (DLS) staffers. The rapid increase in revenues is the result of a number of factors, including strong growth in personal income, soaring property values, and a strong housing market. As a result, state revenues for the fiscal year that ended on June 30 were about $1.2 billion higher than the year before.
The DLS staff stated that based on projections for growth in revenues and growth in spending, the state should have about $1.5 billion in surplus funds for the FY 2007 budget, including the rainy day fund that is maintained to help Maryland keep its AAA bond rating.