Politics & Government
El Paso, Texas ranks #38 in TIA’s latest report
The report is based on the cities' 2021 annual comprehensive financial reports, which are not analyzed on this scale by other organizations.

A new report on the financial condition of the 75 most populous cities ranks El Paso no.38 in the nation for fiscal health. The report is based on the cities’ 2021 annual comprehensive financial reports, which are not analyzed on this scale by any other organization.
The analysis by Truth in Accounting (TIA), a nonprofit government finance watchdog group, found El Paso would need $386.6 million to get out of the red, or $1,900 from each of its taxpayers.
According to the fiscal watchdog's annual Financial State of the Cities report, El Paso had $1.54 billion in bills and only $1.15 billion in available assets to pay those bills after capital and restricted assets are excluded. This resulted in a $386.6 million shortfall, or a $1,900 Taxpayer Burden™, which is each taxpayer's share of the municipal debt after the city's available assets have been tapped.
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After the Covid-pandemic, in large part due to unrealized gains in stock market valuation of its pension investments and federal government stimulus money, El Paso's financial condition appeared to improve. Despite apparent improvements, El Paso had a Taxpayer Burden™ of $1,900, earning it an “C” grade from Truth in Accounting.
The city’s pension liability is calculated by subtracting earned and promised benefits from the market value of pension assets. Based on an exceptionally good year in the markets in 2021, the pension assets’ values were high. The result was a dramatic decrease in El Paso’s pension liability and a corresponding decrease in its money needed to pay bills. Even with inflated pension asset values, the city had set aside only 88 cents for every dollar of promised pension benefits and had set aside no money for promised retiree health care benefits.