Current:Home > InvestGeorgia’s cash hoard approaches $11 billion after a third year of big surpluses -×
Georgia’s cash hoard approaches $11 billion after a third year of big surpluses
View
Date:2025-04-17 08:00:03
ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia now has $10.7 billion in surplus cash that its leaders can spend however they want after the state ran a huge surplus for the third straight year.
The State Accounting Office, in a Monday report, said Georgia ran a $5.3 billion surplus in the 2022 budget year ended June 30, even after spending $32.6 billion.
Total state general fund receipts rose about $1 billion, or 3%. But because Gov. Brian Kemp has kept budgeting spending well below prior year revenues, the amount of surplus cash at the end of each year keeps rising.
The state has other reserves, as well, including a rainy day fund filled to the legal limit of $5.4 billion and a lottery reserve fund that now tops $2.1 billion. All told, Georgia had about $18.5 billion in cash reserves by June 30, an amount equal to more than half of projected state spending for the current budget year.
The $10.7 billion tower of cash is enough to give $1,000 to every Georgia resident. It grew taller even though the Republican Kemp rolled back collection of state gasoline and diesel taxes for much of the budget year, funding more than $1 billion in road and bridge construction from other sources. The governor also persuaded lawmakers to fund a $1.1 billion income tax break out of surplus funds. Without that, Georgia would have closer to $13 billion in extra cash.
Kemp is already dipping into the surplus for tax breaks again, after he issued a novel legal declaration finding that high prices were an emergency in September and again waived collection of Georgia’s gasoline tax of 29.1 cents per gallon and its diesel tax of 32.6 cents per gallon. Lawmakers must ratify the move when they return in January, but Republicans leaders of the state House and Senate have voiced support.
Some state tax collections are cooling off, especially once $185 million a month in fuel taxes are knocked off. The governor’s office said Monday that state tax collections in September, when motor fuel tax collections are excluded, fell by about $100 million compared to the same month in 2022. The declines are mostly in personal income tax collections.
But Georgia is likely to run another multibillion dollar surplus in the budget year that began July 1, unless revenues fall much more sharply.
Kemp indicated in August that he would consider some spending increases, telling state agencies they could ask for 3% increases both when the current 2024 budget is amended and when lawmakers write the 2025 budget next year. He also invited agencies to propose one-time ways to spend the state’s unallocated surplus.
One of the Republican Kemp’s strongest powers as governor is setting the revenue estimate, an amount that state law says legislators cannot exceed when writing the state spending plan.
The governor continues to say he doesn’t want to spend “one-time” revenue on recurring expenses. But it’s far from clear that there’s anything one-time about Georgia’s recurring surpluses at this point. Critics of Kemp’s fiscal policy, including the liberal-leaning Georgia Budget & Policy Institute, say he has starved state services by setting artificially low revenue estimates.
Most Georgia agencies took a 10% cut in the 2021 budget, when government officials feared a sharp revenue drop from the COVID-19 pandemic. Instead, federal stimulus programs and inflation fueled higher income and sales tax collections. Agencies saw their budgets increase in 2022 and 2023, but mostly only to raise employee pay. That means many programs never recovered from the 2021 cuts.
Georgia plans to spend $32.5 billion in state revenue and $55.9 billion overall in the year that began July 1. The difference between the two figures stems mostly from federal funding.
Georgia’s budget pays to educate 1.7 million K-12 students and 435,000 college students; house 49,000 state prisoners; pave 18,000 miles (29,000 kilometers) of highways; and care for more than 200,000 people who are mentally ill, developmentally disabled, or addicted to drugs or alcohol. Education is the state’s biggest expense, followed by health care.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- FTC sues Amazon for 'tricking and trapping' people in Prime subscriptions
- Inside Clean Energy: Navigating the U.S. Solar Industry’s Spring of Discontent
- Study Finds Global Warming Fingerprint on 2022’s Northern Hemisphere Megadrought
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Is now the time to buy a car? High sticker prices, interest rates have many holding off
- Indigenous Leaders in Texas Target Global Banks to Keep LNG Export Off of Sacred Land at the Port of Brownsville
- Texas Oil and Gas Agency Investigating 5.4 Magnitude Earthquake in West Texas, the Largest in Three Decades
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- 'It's gonna be a hot labor summer' — unionized workers show up for striking writers
Ranking
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- Elizabeth Gilbert halts release of a new book after outcry over its Russian setting
- Save 40% On Top-Rated Mascaras From Tarte, Lancôme, It Cosmetics, Urban Decay, Too Faced, and More
- Untangling All the Controversy Surrounding Colleen Ballinger
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Dua Lipa Fantastically Frees the Nipple at Barbie Premiere
- Supreme Court kills Biden's student debt plan in a setback for millions of borrowers
- Republican attacks on ESG aren't stopping companies in red states from going green
Recommendation
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
How the Bud Light boycott shows brands at a crossroads: Use their voice, or shut up?
Pressing Safety Concerns, Opponents of the Mountain Valley Pipeline Gear Up for the Next Round of Battle
Drugmaker Mallinckrodt may renege on $1.7 billion opioid settlement
Intellectuals vs. The Internet
The Truth About Kyra Sedgwick and Kevin Bacon's Enduring 35-Year Marriage
Western tribes' last-ditch effort to stall a large lithium mine in Nevada
A year after Yellowstone floods, fishing guides have to learn 'a whole new river'