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Recovering from a COVID (Spending) Fever
Merriman/ University of Illinois Chicago , David; Wilbur-Mujtaba/ University of Illinois Chicago , Alea; Choi/ University of Illinois Chicago , Francis
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/123239
Description
- Title
- Recovering from a COVID (Spending) Fever
- Author(s)
- Merriman/ University of Illinois Chicago , David
- Wilbur-Mujtaba/ University of Illinois Chicago , Alea
- Choi/ University of Illinois Chicago , Francis
- Contributor(s)
- Kriz/ University of Illinois Springfield , Ken
- Kass/ DePaul University , Amanda
- Issue Date
- 2023-03-15
- Keyword(s)
- revenue
- federal
- Illinois
- state
- billion
- FY22
- taxes
- Medicaid
- Geographic Coverage
- Illinois
- Abstract
- When the state of Illinois’ 2022 fiscal year ended on June 30, 2022, the state and the nation had endured more than 27 months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite a plethora of health, societal, and economic challenges, Illinois emerged from this period in its strongest fiscal position in more than two decades. This fortuitous result was in part due to the exceptional generosity of federal aid but also was attributable to surges in economic activity and own source tax revenue. State spending also rose but much more slowly than revenue. The net result was the first substantially positive fiscal balance since 1998. While this good news may be cause to celebrate, we caution that Illinois’ fiscal situation remains tenuous and is likely to require diligence and restraint to remain healthy in the coming years. We base our findings on data and methodology from the IGPA Fiscal Futures Project which uses detailed revenue and expenditure figures from the Illinois Office of Comptroller (IOC). The Comptroller’s data covers all state spending and revenue, appropriated and non-appropriated within general and special funds. We use an “All Funds” basis of fiscal categories rather than focusing narrowly on Illinois’ general funds. We aggregate the IOC data into a meaningful and consistent set of revenue and expenditure categories focusing on the function of spending rather than fund names or departments.
- Type of Resource
- text
Owning Collections
IGPA Fiscal Futures Project PRIMARY
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