Politics & Government

State Chief Economist: 2011-13 Revenue Forecast is $1.4 Billion Less Than Thought

Arun Raha of the state's Economic and Revenue Forecast Council released his numbers and analysis on Thursday.

The state of Washington is expected to bring in $1.4 billion less than what had beenΒ expected in tax dollarsΒ between this year and 2013, the ο»Ώstate chief economist announced Thursdayο»Ώ.

The baseline of tax dollars thatΒ has been forecastΒ to enter the public coffers between 2011 and 2013Β is $30.3 billion, state officials said. In comparison and as The Seattle Times reported, the state's two-year budget is $32 billion.

Just exactly how this drop, which is another sign of howΒ challenging theΒ recovery from the Great Recession remains, will affect Seattle-area governments or the school districts that serve Sammamish will play out will not be known until state lawmakers come up with line-item language of what stays and what goes.

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But Arun Raha, the chief economist for the state's Economic and Revenue Forecast Council, struckΒ a realistic toneΒ inΒ his statement:

We are in the fragile aftermath of the Great Recession where a return to normalcy seems like a mirage in the desert - the closer we get to it, the further it moves away. Fear and uncertainty have overwhelmed consumer and business behavior. Every time our state has looked like it would break out of the malaise, it has been sucked right back in. Political gridlock in the nation's capital gives little hope that the full toolkit of policy options will be acted on. In an increasingly interconnected world we are not immune to Europe's problems either. Downside risks outweigh upside risks.ο»Ώ

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In his full revenue forecast reportο»Ώ, he noted those downside risks and upside potentials for the state and its residents.

Among the Downside Risks:

  • Congress fails toΒ produce and pass a deficit reduction plan that both the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate can agree upon
  • European countries experience "sovereign" debt default
  • Gross domestic productΒ numbers for the United States are forecast to dip, especiallyΒ closer to 2013
  • Rising wages in India and China create inflationaryΒ pressures

Upsides:

  • Employers hire more workers, which starts a "virtuous" cycle
  • The recovery is aided by pent-up demand

Word of the drop in tax dollars is not a complete surprise. OnΒ Sunday's "Up Front" public affairs program on KING-5, .

He even went so far asΒ to encourage residents who have stable jobs and enough discretionary incomeΒ to spend because a demand for goods and services helps the economy. While aerospace, software and agriculture remain strong areas in the state, he said construction is still hurting.

Leaders in the and ο»Ώ - which rely on state tax dollars to support students in the classroom -Β are well aware of the downward trend of fewerΒ tax dollars.

At a recent board meeting of the Issaquah School District, electedΒ representatives ο»Ώ. They dubbed it a "clawback" - whichΒ is a dollar cut, one that could happen inΒ the middle ofΒ an academic year.

For this academic year, both districts managed to avoid job cuts for teachers and reduced direct classroom services by dipping into reserve funds or levy dollars. But district officials have said this formula to fill in the state dollar shortfall cannot be done for the long term.

Lake Washington School District spokeswoman Kathryn ReithΒ said Thursday thatΒ administrators will want to see how the governorΒ and state lawmakers useΒ the forecast numbersΒ to draftΒ budget legislation.

Sara Niegowski, Issaquah School District spokeswoman, said she would forwardΒ a response to theΒ forecast once the budget staff has had a chanceΒ to analyze the numbers.

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