States Grappling With Hit to Tax Collections

the janitor

Tom Curren status
Mar 28, 2003
12,340
1,737
113
north of the bridge
COVID-19 Pandemic Causing Sharp Revenue Drops in States
Estimated General Fund Tax Revenue Declines
StateFiscal YearDeclineDecline as percent of pre-COVID-19 revenue projections
Alaska2020$612 million10 percent
Alaska2021$882 million15 percent
Alaska2022$797 million14 percent
Arizona2020$616 million5 percent
Arizona2021$218 million2 percent
Arizona2022$341 million3 percent
Arkansas2020$113 million2 percent
Arkansas2021$206 million3 percent
California2020$9.7 billion7 percent
California2021$26–$32.2 billion17–21 percent

That'll be fine :drowning:
 

PRCD

Tom Curren status
Feb 25, 2020
12,695
8,684
113
StateFiscal YearDeclineDecline as percent of pre-COVID-19 revenue projections
Estimated General Fund Tax Revenue Declines
COVID-19 Pandemic Causing Sharp Revenue Drops in States
Alaska2020$612 million10 percent
Alaska2021$882 million15 percent
Alaska2022$797 million14 percent
Arizona2020$616 million5 percent
Arizona2021$218 million2 percent
Arizona2022$341 million3 percent
Arkansas2020$113 million2 percent
Arkansas2021$206 million3 percent
California2020$9.7 billion7 percent
California2021$26–$32.2 billion17–21 percent

That'll be fine :drowning:
Expenses are going the opposite direction mostly due to pension obligations.
 

PRCD

Tom Curren status
Feb 25, 2020
12,695
8,684
113
Maybe they’ll lay off some non-essential government workers.


Ha, who am I kidding?
I worked for the federal government for almost two years. Even though I worked where there was a world class break, it was too boring and I had to find another job. As I was leaving, the Chinese immigrant manager said that he didn't need 75% of his employees but that I could come back any time.

IT's hard to know what our state employees do. Nothing seems to get done: roads, schools, etc. I sent in some paperwork to the DMV about 4 months ago tryign to register a boat I built and got nothing back.