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WSWS : News
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America
Revenue shortfalls lead to job losses and funding freezes
in New Jersey
By Jack Taylor
2 February 2002
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The economic slowdown in the US has led to a precipitous drop
in tax revenues for states and municipalities. In New Jersey this
development, together with the impact of tax cuts enacted during
the administration of former Governor Christie Whitman throughout
the 1990s, has produced a budget crisis of unprecedented proportions.
New revenue figures certified on January 28 by State Treasurer
John McCormac, who referred to the magnitude of the shortfall
as staggering, showed the states $23 billion
budget to be out of balance by a total of $2.9 billion, or about
12.6 percent. Revenues from the states big three
taxesincome, sales and corporatehave fallen nearly
$1 billion short of projections over the past two months alone,
including a record one-month shortfall of $505 million in December.
The state Constitution contains an amendment requiring a balanced
budget.
The extent to which public revenuesand by extension,
public expenditures and servicesare dictated by movements
in the stock market is being vividly illustrated in New Jersey.
With the highest per capita income in the nation (as a result
of the high percentage of wealthy New York suburbs), it relies
more heavily on personal income tax revenue than most states.
The collapse of the stock market over the past year, and of capital
gains income with it, has drastically reduced income tax receipts.
The Enron collapsewhich cost the state workers
pension fund over $60 million when 2.6 million shares bought for
$62 million were sold for $1.8 million earlier this monthhas
doubtless contributed to the crisis. For the first 25 days in
January, income tax revenue was off by $374 million, some 80 percent
of the months total shortfall. For the fiscal year ending
June 30, 2002, the administration of newly inaugurated Governor
Jim McGreevey estimates that income taxes will generate $1.5 billion
less than the amount projected by the Whitman administration,
and $600 million less than last year.
If a $1 billion error in the projected revenue generating capacity
of the income tax reflects the inability of the big business politicians
to understand and control the fundamental forces at work in the
economy, cuts in public services aimed at the working class characterize
their method of accounting for those forces after the fact.
In what are widely described as preliminary steps
to address the shortfall, pink slips were distributed to about
600 state workers across all departments, with indications that
over 1,000 could eventually see their jobs eliminated. Notable
among these was the Office of State Planning, authors of the State
Development and Redevelopment Plan, whose entire professional
staff of 27 were issued notices telling them that their
duties and obligation to report to work cease immediately.
Savings from the eradication of this office are expected to total
about $2 million, and are part of a broader effort to reduce state
operating costs by $100 million, a quarter of which is to be accounted
for by worker salaries.
Other preliminary steps include cutting aid to higher education
by an additional $50 million, on top of the $22 million already
cut by the previous acting governor, Donald DiFrancesco, as well
as freezing state aid to municipalities at current levels. Both
moves will disproportionately impact lower income and working
families, especially those that may depend on financial aid to
afford attending college, and especially those that live in urban
areas which depend on state aid as a primary source of municipal
income.
Loss of a yearly inflation adjustment to municipal aid can
total from half a million dollars for a medium-size city such
as New Brunswick, to well into the millions for large cities such
as Newark. Cities and towns will be forced to balance these cuts,
in turn, with cuts in public services and increases in property
taxes, further weakening the financial position and quality of
life of working people.
To top these measures off, a 10 percent transit fare increase
is to take effect April 1 of this year, the enactment of which
includes authority to implement subsequent annual increases through
2007.
Around the country, 43 other states also face budget gaps of
varying gravity. California faces a $4.5 billion deficit, and
New York a $3 billion deficit, larger nominal shortfalls, but
smaller relative deficits when compared with New Jersey. The total
funding gap for these 44 states currently stands at $40 billion,
and is expected to rise to $50 billion by the end of the fiscal
year.
Though New Jersey has felt the impact most acutely, the same
general process is at work nationwide: after having cut taxes
by some $34 billion during the stock market boom between 1995
and 2000, the economic downturn has thrown state governments into
a fiscal crisis for which the working class, despite no increase
in its living standards or real income over that period, is being
forced to assume responsibility.
See Also:
Strikebreaking judges,
defiant teachers: the real face of class relations in the US
[14 December 2001]
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