Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Walters: No Federal Bailout for California Budget
dan_walters
By Dan Walters, CalMatters Commentary
Published 3 years ago on
December 22, 2020

Share

California’s fiscal squeeze tightened up Sunday when congressional leaders reached agreement on a $900 billion COVID-19 relief package that did not include direct aid to state and local governments.

It means that Gov. Gavin Newsom faces fewer choices in fashioning a 2021-22 fiscal year budget that he must propose to legislators by Jan. 10 and that California cities struggling with budget deficits won’t be getting help from Washington.

Dan Walters

Opinion

For the last six months, ever since the state passed its current budget, Newsom and legislative leaders have been crossing their fingers that a second relief package from Washington would offset the contingent spending cuts and off-budget borrowing they used to make it balance on paper.

The hoped-for but elusive number was $14 billion. However, Newsom, et al, have since gotten some good news from California taxpayers. Administration forecasts that revenues would plummet into the abyss as pandemic-spawned recession struck the state proved to be too pessimistic.

All-important income taxes have held up unexpectedly well because affluent Californians, who provide the bulk of income taxes, have largely maintained their income streams by shifting to home work while their stock market holdings have soared in value.

Steadier-than-expected income taxes, coupled with the spending cuts made in June, are producing a one-time $26 billion windfall for the state, according to Gabe Petek, the Legislature’s budget analyst. However, with economic recovery slowing due to new pandemic shutdowns, administration officials see a somewhat lower windfall.

Whatever its size, the windfall potentially offsets the lack of a new federal bailout, but also creates its own dilemma.

Should the extra money be socked away to guard against projected deficits in the future or be spent on education, health care and safety net services that were cut in vain hopes of more federal aid?

Advocates for those services, including legislative leaders, tend toward a spend-it-now approach, but were they to prevail and the projected deficits became reality, the political onus would fall on Newsom.

Newsom Is Caught in the Middle of the Great Tax Debate

An unspoken, but very real, aspect to the situation is that many liberal groups and allied Democratic legislators want the state to raise taxes on corporations and/or the wealthiest Californians not only to fill current holes but to permanently increase spending on education, health care, homelessness and social services.

Tax increase advocates contend that the pandemic has widened California’s already immense gaps of wealth and income that should be narrowed by spending more on programs to assist those on the lower rungs of the economic ladder.

Newsom is caught in the middle of the great tax debate. He supported Proposition 15, the unsuccessful effort to raise taxes on commercial property, but in doing so, threw cold water on calls for new taxes on income or wealth.

Newsom clearly fears that the threat of such levies would drive the wealthy, who supply most of the state’s revenues, to flee the state. That fear was underscored this month when Elon Musk, the billionaire founder of Tesla, declared that he was personally moving to Texas, which has no income tax, and increasing Tesla’s presence in that state.

Newsom’s 2021-22 budget will probably take a middle-of-the-road course — spending some but not all of the windfall, setting aside demands for new taxes and once again hoping that when Joe Biden becomes president, an aid package for state and local governments will be fashioned.

“Those fiscal pressures are still going to be there next month, when a new Congress and a new administration take office,” H.D. Palmer, the spokesman for Newsom’s budget office, said after the aid package was announced on Sunday.

CalMatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

[activecampaign form=19]

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Magical ‘Aladdin’ Delivers Magic Carpet Ride and Dad-Joke Humor

DON'T MISS

Over 2,000 Arrested in US Campus Pro-Palestinian Protests

DON'T MISS

Another State Department Official Resigns Over Biden’s Gaza Policy

DON'T MISS

These Two Fresno Pacific Students Faced Challenges. They’ll Graduate on Saturday.

DON'T MISS

Crawford Goes 7 Innings, Wong Has 3 Hits, and Red Sox Beat Giants

DON'T MISS

WNBA Teams Look for Bigger Arenas When Caitlin Clark Comes to Town

DON'T MISS

Biden Expands Two National Monuments in California Significant to Tribal Nations

DON'T MISS

Boxer Ryan Garcia Denies Using Performance-Enhancing Drugs After Beating Devin Haney

DON'T MISS

Yamamoto Shines Again as Dodgers Blank Diamondbacks

DON'T MISS

Peloton Cutting About 400 Jobs Worldwide; CEO McCarthy Stepping Down

UP NEXT

New Battlegrounds Emerge in California’s Political Guerrilla War Over Housing

UP NEXT

Is the ‘Scholasticide’ in Gaza Spreading to the United States?

UP NEXT

As California Cracks Down on Groundwater, What Happens to Fallowed Farmland?

UP NEXT

California Charter School Battles Intensify as Education Finances Get Squeezed

UP NEXT

Trita Parsi: Blind Support for Israel Erodes Western Democracies

UP NEXT

Key Questions About CA Budget Deficit Unanswered as Deadlines Loom

UP NEXT

Legislation Pandering to Tribal Casinos Is a Bad Bet for Fresno Cardroom Employees

UP NEXT

Newsom Criticizes Local Response to Homelessness. He Should Look in the Mirror.

UP NEXT

By Remembering the Genocide, We Can Help Rebuild Armenia

UP NEXT

Californians Worry About Crime, Setting up a Ballot Measure Showdown

These Two Fresno Pacific Students Faced Challenges. They’ll Graduate on Saturday.

Local Education /

2 hours ago

Crawford Goes 7 Innings, Wong Has 3 Hits, and Red Sox Beat Giants

2 hours ago

WNBA Teams Look for Bigger Arenas When Caitlin Clark Comes to Town

2 hours ago

Biden Expands Two National Monuments in California Significant to Tribal Nations

2 hours ago

Boxer Ryan Garcia Denies Using Performance-Enhancing Drugs After Beating Devin Haney

2 hours ago

Yamamoto Shines Again as Dodgers Blank Diamondbacks

2 hours ago

Peloton Cutting About 400 Jobs Worldwide; CEO McCarthy Stepping Down

2 hours ago

Senators Want Limits on Government’s Use of Facial Recognition Technology for Airport Screening

3 hours ago

Biden Says ‘Order Must Prevail’ on Campuses, but He Won’t Send National Guard

3 hours ago

Police Dismantle UCLA Tent Camp, Take Pro-Palestinian Protesters Into Custody

3 hours ago

Magical ‘Aladdin’ Delivers Magic Carpet Ride and Dad-Joke Humor

Genie’s wit and puns would make any dad joke-teller proud. And, the colorful sets and the special effects of the carpet ride made for ...

5 mins ago

5 mins ago

Magical ‘Aladdin’ Delivers Magic Carpet Ride and Dad-Joke Humor

5 mins ago

Over 2,000 Arrested in US Campus Pro-Palestinian Protests

25 mins ago

Another State Department Official Resigns Over Biden’s Gaza Policy

Local Education /
2 hours ago

These Two Fresno Pacific Students Faced Challenges. They’ll Graduate on Saturday.

2 hours ago

Crawford Goes 7 Innings, Wong Has 3 Hits, and Red Sox Beat Giants

2 hours ago

WNBA Teams Look for Bigger Arenas When Caitlin Clark Comes to Town

2 hours ago

Biden Expands Two National Monuments in California Significant to Tribal Nations

2 hours ago

Boxer Ryan Garcia Denies Using Performance-Enhancing Drugs After Beating Devin Haney

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend