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States’ fragile recovery at risk

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(MCT) — With the national economy picking up and the housing market improving, states are poised in 2013 to finally rebound from the recession’s lingering revenue crunch. But continued budget delays in Washington may dampen that prospect.

For all the talk about the fiscal cliff, states already know what a free-fall in revenue feels like; they experienced one in the 2008-2009 recession. Back then, Washington bailed out the states, sending billions to help back-fill the massive deficits. Now states face the prospect of digging out of new budget holes created by belt-tightening in Washington.

“We fell off the cliff and we are limping our way back up,” says Donald J. Boyd, senior fellow at the Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government in Albany, N.Y. The latest figures from Rockefeller suggest that state tax collections are back at the levels they reached before the recession. But adjusted for inflation, taxes are still below their 2008 peak.

“We’re not yet back where we need to be,” says Scott Pattison, executive director of the National Association of State Budget Officers. NASBO’s latest survey predicts total general fund revenues will surpass peak pre-recession levels this year for the first time since the onset of the recession. Still, Pattison warns, “money is going to be tight for the foreseeable future, for several years at least, no matter what happens.”

Several crucial deadlines looming from Washington will have huge consequences for the budget year that begins July 1 in most states. The deal that Congress and President Obama reached in early January averted the most severe tax increases expected from the fiscal cliff, but put off the question of $85 billion in spending cuts for fiscal 2013 until March 1, a crucial question for states since the federal government provides about 30 percent of their revenue. For some states, that amount is even more.

And while House Republicans agreed recently to extend U.S. borrowing authority until later this spring, states could still get ensnared in the debate over whether to raise the debt ceiling, the legal limit on how much the United States can borrow. The last time the U.S. government nearly defaulted, in 2011, five states (Maryland, New Mexico, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia) faced seeing their top credit ratings downgraded because they rely so heavily on federal spending or borrowing. A federal default would have made it more difficult for the states themselves to borrow.

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