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TAX REVENUES: State budget woes to continue

Experts: Flat economy won't improve anytime soon

CARSON CITY -- Gov. Jim Gibbons and state legislators cannot count on a quick recovery from the severe economic downturn that has left them scampering to find where to cut $898 million from Nevada's two-year budget.

Economists and housing industry experts predict the state's flat economy won't turn around before the last half of 2009 and might not regain its usual robust growth for another three to five years.


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  • That means the state's top elected officials not only face decisions this week on how to make dramatic cuts, they're also likely to go into the legislative session next year with tax revenues no larger than today's.

    "Our state is going to be in a world of hurt," said Assemblywoman Sheila Leslie, D-Reno. "That reality is starting to sink in at my level. It is frightening."

    Legislators and Gibbons are scheduled to resume discussions today on how to cut an additional $333 million out of the $6.8 billion two-year budget without cutting services or laying off workers.

    Another $565 million was cut in January, including a 4.5 percent reduction for state agencies.

    The time when politicians could campaign for more full-day kindergarten classes and expansion of state services is over, said Eric Herzik, a political science professor at the University of Nevada, Reno.

    "It is not a rosy future," he said. "Remember, just six months ago people were saying Jim Gibbons was making things up when he started talking about budget cuts. Well, nobody is in denial anymore."

    Herzik said legislators are going to walk into the 2009 session with no ability to expand services unless they increase taxes at a time "when people in the state are hurting."

    Gibbons vowed within hours after the 2007 session ended to veto any bills increasing taxes in 2009.

    Democratic leaders such as Assembly Speaker Barbara Buckley won't lead the charge for higher taxes if they have aspirations for the governor's race in 2010, Herzik predicted.

    But Buckley said Saturday the only thing she is certain to do at this point is seek re-election to the Assembly, where she'll seek to protect public education and other government services from additional cuts.

    "This is the real thing," state Sen. Bob Beers said about the downturn. "It is certain Nevada families are dealing with less, and my concern is we would hurt them further by a misguided reaction to it by raising taxes."

    Beers, R-Las Vegas, blames the record $833 million tax increase in 2003 and the move by health care advocates -- and approved by voters -- to prohibit smoking in restaurants and bars in 2006 for exacerbating the current economic crisis.

    He said the tax increases and the smoking ban caused some people to cut back on purchases and not eat out as much.

    Budget Director Andrew Clinger said a number of cuts being considered include:

    Taking $40 million in general fund revenue set aside for the $245 million expansion of Interstate 15 from the Spaghetti Bowl to Craig Road in Las Vegas. The project still would be built on schedule, but paid for using Transportation Department gasoline tax money.

    Delaying construction of the $90 million Health Sciences Center on university campuses, and possibly postponing the expansion of four state prisons. Those projects still would be designed, but construction would be delayed. The governor wants to save $150 million to $180 million by delaying construction projects.

    Using the $35 million left in the state's rainy day fund and postponing the payment of $36 million set aside to settle a tax case with Southern California Edison, which operated a now closed power plant near Laughlin.

    Requiring state agencies to cut spending in the fiscal year starting July 1 by $52 million, or 3 percent. The agencies affected have not been determined.

    Although revenue has fallen far below expectations, Nevada growth has not stopped.

    State Demographer Jeff Hardcastle reported Wednesday that the state population growth slowed to a 3.6 percent increase in the year ending June 30.

    But the state still added 95,287 residents. And the U.S. Census Bureau announced in December that Nevada was the fastest-growing state for the 20th time in 21 years.

    Public school enrollment also has slowed, but is expected to increase by 13,750 students in the 2009-11 budget period.

    Nevada now spends $5,100 per student, or more than 35 percent of the state's budget, on public school education.

    Legislators are beginning to realize there will be little, if any, additional money to cover this growth and inflation, which averaged 4 percent over the last 12 months.

    "It is a problem we will have to deal with," said state Senate Majority Leader Bill Raggio, R-Reno.

    Gibbons said last Monday he intends to balance the budget now and again in 2009 without taking more taxes from residents who must pay $5 per gallon for milk and more than $3 per gallon for gasoline.

    Raggio, a state senator for 35 years, said the downturn is not that unusual.

    "Percentagewise it probably is less than during (Gov. Bob) Miller's administration," he said. "There are 27 other states to my knowledge that have similar problems."

    Raggio remembers Miller cutting spending by more than 10 percent during a recession in 1991-92.

    The current revenue decline is 8.7 percent.

    But the economy quickly recovered after Miller's cuts.

    That might not happen this time, said Dennis Smith, president of Home Builders Research in Las Vegas.

    "I am not sure yet we have hit bottom," Smith said about the slump in the housing market. "I do not see a return to the heyday (of 2004-06). Loans are harder to get. It will turn around. How long is it going to take? Maybe three years to five years."

    Herzik said the difference from the recession in Miller's administration was that state tourism declined largely because of poor economies in California and other states.

    "This time it is affecting Nevadans," he said. "The housing slump, the foreclosures have hit Nevada worse than anywhere else. In the past, bad things happened to other people."

    State economist Jim Shabi sees some recovery occurring late in 2009, when the City Center hotel-condominum complex in Las Vegas is expected to open and offer 12,000 jobs.

    But the tightening of credit standards makes it difficult to acquire loans for both residential and commercial construction, and gaming industry executives might postpone big Southern Nevada projects, he said.

    "We really don't have a crystal ball that says when we will recover," Shabi said. "They (lenders) aren't giving away money any more."

    The drop in real estate sales has been blamed by Clinger for spawning state government's economic woes.

    At briefings, he has explained that when home sales began to decline last year, residents also did not buy as many big ticket items like cars and refrigerators.

    That caused sale tax receipts to plunge.

    Then, gasoline prices skyrocketed and people didn't have as much discretionary income to spend on eating out and shopping in the local malls.

    Keith Schwer, director of the Center for Business and Economic Research at UNLV, is more optimistic than others about a quicker recovery.

    He predicts a bump in the economy late this spring when taxpayers receive $600 rebate checks under the federal economic stimulus plan.

    "It won't be dramatic, but it will help," Schwer said. "It is hard to see a big recession coming. We aren't falling off the face of the earth. We still have some job growth, and increased job growth will go a long way toward filling up excess housing units."

    Herzik noted even cigarette and liquor sales are off during the current downturn.

    "What we need is for people to start gambling, drinking and smoking," said Herzik, not entirely in jest.

    Contact Capital Bureau Chief Ed Vogel at evogel@reviewjournal.com or 775-687-3901.

    NEVADA GENERAL FUND REVENUES
    Type of Tax Economic Forum projections Revised Budget Office projections Difference Percent difference
    Sales tax $2,205,388,000 $1,955,000,000 ($250,388,000) -11.4%
    Percentage fees 1,792,209,000 1,681,800,000 (110,409,000) -6.2
    Modified business tax 624,112,000 557,500,000 (66,612,000) -10.7
    Insurance premium tax 609,950,000 528,500,000 (81,450,000) -13.4
    Live entertainment tax: Gaming 272,882,000 255,000,000 (17,882,000) -6.6
    Real property transfer tax 259,046,000 173,900,000 (85,146,000) -32.9
    Cigarette tax 231,900,000 219,600,000 (12,300,000) -5.3
    Total secretary of state 217,428,300 200,132,977 (17,295,323) -8.0
    Treasurer interest income 73,012,000 76,512,000 3,500,000 4.8
    Liquor tax 82,396,000 80,300,000 (2,096,000) -2.5
    Short-term car lease 59,920,000 64,100,000 4,180,000 7.0
    Net proceeds of minerals 45,542,000 63,900,000 18,358,000 40.3
    Local sales-tax collection allowance 43,852,000 39,254,614 (4,597,386) -10.5
    Business license fee 39,391,000 41,555,578 2,164,578 5.5
    Unclaimed property 34,361,000 57,263,000 22,902,000 66.7
    Live entertainment tax: Nongaming 19,315,496 21,371,000 2,055,504 10.6
    All other unrestricted general fund revenues 201,753,856 201,753,856 0 0.0
    TOTAL 6,812,458,652 6,217,443,025 (595,015,627) -8.7

    *Figures within parentheses are minuses
    SOURCE: Nevada Budget Office
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    CAS127 wrote on April 08, 2008 09:44 AM: ""What we need is for people to start gambling, drinking and smoking," said Herzik, not entirely in jest"

    And when they are completely drunk, they will be in the proper state of mind to buy one of our many, many, many insanely overpriced homes.

    Hooray for the "productive" economy of NV.

    Founded in stupidity, committed to stupidity.


    Tony wrote on April 08, 2008 01:57 AM: The Casinos are only being tax 6.5 percent that's a very low rate compared to other states.Most states tax their casinos around 19-22 percent.I think the teacher petition is asking for a 3 percent increase which isn't very much.It's time we Americans demand our government work for us the people not the corporations.


    David Johann wrote on April 07, 2008 10:22 PM: Wanna know who helped get us into this mess caused by the sub-prime crisis? Why, it was none other than McCain's economic advisor, former Senator Phil Gramm.

    " . . . former Senator Phil Gramm, the general co-chair of McCain's campaign and one of his top financial advisors, was the primary force behind the banking deregulation bill in 1999 that helped pave the way for the current subprime meltdown.

    "Two years after Gramm dutifully did the banks' bidding, he was rewarded, after a quick trip through the revolving door, with the title of vice chairman at UBS and, along with two others, with $750,000 in lobbying fees. UBS investors weren't as lucky as Phil: the bank has written off over $18 billion in subprime loans, while 8,000 UBS employees were laid off.

    "And McCain has hinted that Gramm might be his Treasury Secretary.

    "The new McCain has started backing away even from campaign finance reform, his signature maverick issue. And with his buddy Phil best-friend-the-banks-ever-had Gramm right behind him, the idea that McCain is some sort of financial reformer is absurd."

    http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2008/04/want_a_taste_of_the_mccain_pre.html

    As an additional point, Phil Gramm's wife, Wendy, was on the Board at Enron.


    Common sense wrote on April 07, 2008 05:48 PM: It is no secret that Nevadas are under taxed. May be time for an income tax, or maybe a higher sales tax


    Ted wrote on April 07, 2008 01:37 PM: Dear Bruce Graham:

    I note that you rail against the dem party for tax and spend, but have you ever considered the evil of spending what you don't have, without a plan on how to pay for same? That is what the rep party has done EVERY time they control the congress. So, do you prefer a welfare queen or someone that pays for what they spend?

    Seems to me, you prefer to spend money you don't have, and leave it to someone else and a different generation to pick up the tab. Doesn't speak well of the proclaimed self sufficient rep values, does it?

    Let's agree that NONE shold be re-elected and that too much tax money finds it way into the pockets of those that contribute to the elected class!


    joe wrote on April 07, 2008 01:14 PM: "Beers, R-Las Vegas, blames the record $833 million tax increase in 2003 and the move by health care advocates -- and approved by voters -- to prohibit smoking in restaurants and bars in 2006 for exacerbating the current economic crisis.

    He said the tax increases and the smoking ban caused some people to cut back on purchases and not eat out as much."

    What an idiot. I wasn't sure who the worse Republican choice for Govenor was between Beers or Gibbons, and I'm still not sure.

    Is Beers really serious about that statement? Though there is probably a very small economic impact by not letting smokers kills those of us who don't smoke in eating establishments, the smokers still purchase just as much food and smoke just as many cigarettes as they ever have. They just can't blow thier toxic filth into mine and my family's faces anymore.

    To try and equate our current economic strains on anything other than the borrow and spend money from China to pay for Iraq, Enron dictating this country's energy policys, and the buddy-buddy relationship of big oil with the Bush administration is idiotic.

    Sen. Beers, here's a little education for you: People don't have money to throw around anymore because the high price of living because of our Republican (your own party's) President.......period. Nevada's economy is reliant on people's throw-around money and when the money to throw around isn't there because of high gas, food, and energy prices then our economy suffers.

    Sen. Beers, you need to quit blaming our economic woes those of us who are trying to improve our own health by banning smoking in public places and get a clue to real life.


    Timothy wrote on April 07, 2008 01:12 PM: How about bringing the State Lottery to Nevada to help out? Use that money for education instead of taxing casinos to death. Why cut off the hand that is feeding you?


    curley wrote on April 07, 2008 11:30 AM: hey guys without Nevada there would be no casinos.and without casinos there would be no Nevada...


    DJ2 wrote on April 07, 2008 11:04 AM: I would love to get out there and buy more taxable goods! The problem is, after filling my tank, paying more for groceries (esp dairy products), saving up for the massive summer electrical bills and winter gas bills...along with more costs for water...well, I just don't have anything left for the luxury of discretionary spending.

    Sorry, government, I'd love to help, but I can't.


    nevada taxpayer wrote on April 07, 2008 09:12 AM: "will not regain its usual robust growth for another three to five years"

    3-5 years!?...are you people crazy??? To much has been destroyed, for too long!!! #1 QUIT CUTTING DEALS WITH THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT! Grow up and start acting like a State. Learn to solve our own problems. #2 Throw out every elected official that can't balance his/her check book. Throw out all officials who DO NOT represent the people. Throw out gov officials who fail to address problems and solve them in a timely manner. Promote gov whistle blowers resulting in the cutting of staff in the AG's office, lawsuits etc ect.
    ...WITHOUT REFORM, THE PAIN WILL CONTINUE!!!!!!
    Good Luck, x nevada citizen


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