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States’ fragile recovery at risk

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The current set of fiscal deadlines could open broader deficit reduction talks, putting policies important to states on the table. A deficit reduction deal could include major changes in entitlement programs, such as Medicaid, and the tax-free treatment Washington gives to state and local government bonds to help market them.

States are unsure how any of these talks will turn out. “All this uncertainty really puts a crimp on the potential for companies, individuals and states to embark on serious planning for the future,” says Sujit M. CanagaRetna, a senior fiscal analyst at the Council of State Governments. “We’re lurching from one crisis to another and not having any set plan.”

Advocates for smaller government counter that states shouldn’t rely so much on money from the federal government in the first place. “Federal bailouts — a.k.a. ‘stimulus’ — have created a disincentive for the states to pursue spending reforms,” says Tad DeHaven, a budget analyst at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank in the nation’s capital.

While state revenues are gradually recovering from the dramatic recession-period decline, they are still not growing quickly enough to keep pace with Medicaid costs, looming pension bills, and increased expenditures for education and infrastructure.

The recovery has also been uneven. States such as North Dakota and Nebraska have been flush during the recession because of boom times in energy and commodities, while Nevada and Rhode Island still face double-digit unemployment rates and tight budgets, in part because of the housing bust.

Provided the hit from Washington this year isn’t too great, a group of states including Iowa, Indiana and Florida will spend much of this year debating what to do with budget surpluses. Even California, which every year for the past decade has had to dig out of a multi-billion-dollar deficit hole, now has a budget that is roughly in balance and talk is of surpluses. Gov. Jerry Brown’s budget assumes a $1 billion surplus by the end of 2013-14, while the state’s independent analyst projects a $1 billion surplus in 2014-15. This dramatic turnaround is due in large part to voters approving Brown’s temporary tax increase last November.

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