Current:Home > StocksGeorgia state government cash reserves keep growing despite higher spending -Prime Capital Blueprint
Georgia state government cash reserves keep growing despite higher spending
View
Date:2025-04-12 20:30:03
ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia’s bank accounts bulge ever fatter after revenue collections in the 2023 budget year outstripped efforts to spend down some surplus cash.
State government now has more than $11 billion in unallocated surplus cash that leaders can spend however they want, after Georgia ran a fourth year of surpluses.
The State Accounting Office, in a Tuesday report, said Georgia ended up collecting more than it spent even after officials boosted spending on one-time projects. Georgia spent $37.8 billion in state money in the 2023 budget year ending June 30 but collected $38.2 billion in revenues.
The state has other reserves, as well, including a rainy day fund filled to the legal limit of $5.5 billion and a lottery reserve fund that now tops $2.4 billion. All told, Georgia had $19.1 billion in cash reserves on June 30, an amount equal to more than half of projected spending of state revenue for the current budget year.
Total general fund receipts grew about 1.4%. That’s a slowdown from roughly 3% growth the previous year. 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 governor by law sets a ceiling on how much lawmakers can spend, and over each of the past four years, he has significantly underestimated how much Georgia would collect in taxes.
The $11 billion is held in surplus instead of being used to boost spending on government services or cut taxes. It’s enough to give $1,000 to all 11 million Georgia residents. Kemp has said he wants to hold on to at least some extra cash to make sure the state can pay for additional planned state income tax cuts without cutting services. The governor and lawmakers have also been spending cash on construction projects instead of borrowing to pay for them as they traditionally do, a move that decreases state debt over time. Kemp and lawmakers had said they would subtract $2 billion from the surplus by boosting spending for onetime outlays to pay $1,000 bonuses to state employees and teachers, increase roadbuilding, and to build a new legislative office building and overhaul the state Capitol. But it turns out revenues exceeded original projections by even more than that $2 billion, meaning no surplus was spent down.
State tax collections are not growing as rapidly as were immediately after pandemic. And Kemp has waived weeks of fuel taxes after Hurricane Helene, although collections resumed Wednesday. But unless revenues fall much more sharply, Georgia will again be in line to run another multibillion surplus in the budget year that began July 1.
Kemp’s budget chief told state agencies in July to not ask for any general increases when the current 2025 budget is amended and when lawmakers write the 2026 budget next year. However, the Office of Planning and Budget said it would consider agency requests for “a new workload need or a specific initiative that would result in service improvement and outyear savings.”
Georgia plans to spend $36.1 billion in state revenue — or $66.8 billion overall once federal and other revenue is included — in the year that began July 1.
Georgia’s budget pays to educate 1.75 million K-12 students and 450,000 college students, house 51,000 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.
veryGood! (99215)
Related
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- Gavin Newsom picks Laphonza Butler to fill Dianne Feinstein's Senate seat
- Disney+ is cracking down on password sharing in Canada. Is the US next?
- It's don't let the stars beat you season! Four pivotal players for MLB's wild-card series
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Mobile apps fueling AI-generated nudes of young girls: Spanish police
- Black man’s 1845 lynching in downtown Indianapolis recounted with historical marker
- You Don't Wanna Wait to Revisit Jodie Turner-Smith and Joshua Jackson's Private Marriage
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Adam Copeland, aka Edge, makes AEW debut in massive signing, addresses WWE departure
Ranking
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Cigna is paying over $172 million to settle claims over Medicare Advantage reimbursement
- A man suspected of fatally shooting 3 people is shot and killed by police officers in Philadelphia
- DNA helps identify killer 30 years after Florida woman found strangled to death
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- UN Security Council approves sending a Kenya-led force to Haiti to fight violent gangs
- Health care has a massive carbon footprint. These doctors are trying to change that
- Philadelphia journalist who advocated for homeless and LGBTQ+ communities shot and killed at home
Recommendation
A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
Wind power project in New Jersey would be among farthest off East Coast, company says
Beyoncé announces Renaissance Tour concert film: 'Start over, start fresh, create the new'
Family using metal detector to look for lost earring instead finds treasures from Viking-era burial
Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
Philadelphia journalist who advocated for homeless and LGBTQ+ communities shot and killed at home
Fires on Indonesia’s Sumatra island cause smoky haze, prompting calls for people to work from home
Iraqi Christian religious leaders demand an international investigation into deadly wedding fire