https://www.americancityandcounty.com/wp-content/themes/acc_child/assets/images/logo/footer-logo.png
  • Home
  • Co-op Solutions
  • Commentaries
  • News
  • In-Depth
  • Multimedia
    • Back
    • Podcast
  • Resources
    • Back
    • Resources
    • Webinars
    • White Papers
    • Events
    • How to Contribute
    • Municipal Cost Index – Archive
    • Equipment Watch Page
    • American City & County Awards
  • Magazine
    • Back
    • Digital Editions
    • Reprints & Reuse
    • Advertise
  • About Us
    • Back
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Statement
    • Terms of Service
American City and County
  • NEWSLETTER
  • Home
  • Co-op Solutions
  • Commentaries
  • News
  • In-Depth
  • Multimedia
    • Back
    • Podcasts
  • Resources
    • Back
    • Webinars
    • White Papers
    • Events
    • How to Contribute
    • American City & County Awards
    • Municipal Cost Index
    • Equipment Watch Page
  • Magazine
    • Back
    • Digital Editions
    • Reprints & Reuse
    • Subscribe to GovPro
    • Manage GovPro Subscription
    • Advertise
  • About Us
    • Back
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Cookie Policy
    • Privacy Stament
    • Terms of Service
  • newsletter
  • Administration
  • Economy & Finance
  • Procurement
  • Public Safety
  • Public Works & Utilities
  • Smart Cities & Technology
acc.com

Economy


A budding recovery

  • Written by conley
  • 23rd October 2012
Some signs point to better financial road ahead for local and state governments.

What is in this article?

  • A budding recovery
  • But then there are positive signs
  • Creative problem solving helps budgets
  • Pensions are a wild card

A budding recovery

Since its 2008 budget year, the revenue line in Atlanta has fallen nearly $120 million, from $645 million to a projected $526 million in its 2013 budget. The reduced income has forced city leaders to make painful cuts in services, furlough and lay off workers and change how the government does business.

But starting in the 2014 budget, revenues reverse course, with a chart projecting future budgets showing a steady increase, rising to $553 million by the 2017 budget year. A modest increase, but welcome nonetheless.

“We think this is the bottom,” J. Anthony Beard, the city’s chief financial officer, recently told a group of financial professionals and journalists. “In Fiscal Years 14 and 15, we see a strengthening in revenue.”

Atlanta is not alone in seeing glimmers of a turnaround in the finances of the nation’s local governments, after one of the most trying periods since the Great Depression of the 1930s. With the economy slowly moving ahead and a tentative firming in the real estate market, financial prospects are brightening, though tempered.

“We’re cautious about what the coming months hold,” says Christopher Hoene, director for research and innovation at the Washington-based National League of Cities and co-author of a September report on the fiscal condition of the nation’s cities. “We think the peak of the cutting was in 2011 and 2012. We hope that is so, but we’re watching from month to month.”

Left to its natural course, a growing economy, though struggling, might be sufficient to lift the revenue lines in local government. But the uncertainty in federal policy making, with looming tax increases and sharp revenue cuts, gives forecasters pause. “We can’t afford another hit,” Hoene warns. “The recovery could easily be turned in the other direction.”

Squeezed by lingering problems

INFOGRAPHIC: Two major revenue sources drop in 2010Other experts in local government finance are also concerned about lingering problems related to promised, but unfunded, pension and retirement health care benefits, as well as recent efforts at the state level to reduce their own costs, often at the expense of local government support. Experts also point out that any real estate recovery is uneven and vulnerable, though recent easing of monetary policy by the U.S. Federal Reserve is aimed directly at improving that market.

“We hope the worst is behind us,” says Robert Zahrardnik, a lead author of the Pew Charitable Trust’s report on local finances, released this summer. “But there’s a lot of room for caution as we move forward.”

Entitled “The Local Squeeze,” the Pew report, from its American Cities Project, says that recent years have been particularly difficult for local government as their traditional pillars of revenue – state aid and property tax assessments – were simultaneously cut from beneath them.

State aid, which funds nearly one-third of local government budgets, fell by $12.6 billion, or 2.6 percent, in fiscal year 2010, according to Pew. That trend is continuing, with 26 states reporting cuts in local government funding in 2011 and 18 states so far in 2012.

Property taxes — the other side of the squeeze — are shrinking, too, Pew found. Those taxes, which amount to 29 percent of local government revenues, have dropped after the collapse of real estate prices during the recession. In 2010, according to the report, property tax revenues were $11.9 billion or 2.5 percent lower than the year before, the largest decline in decades. Property taxes also fell in 2011 and are expected to decrease further in 2012 and 2013, as assessments, which often lag actual property values, catch up to the real estate bust.

1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
But then there are positive signs
Tags: Economy News

Leave a comment Cancel reply

-or-

Log in with your American City and County account

Alternatively, post a comment by completing the form below:

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Content

  • American City & County’s 2020 Crown Communities Awards
  • Online sales tax collections proving essential for many state and local governments during COVID-19
  • Bridging the digital divide by fostering digital inclusion and economic recovery
  • Learning from 2020, a busy year for economic developers

White papers


How-to Tips to Prepare for Your Summer Construction Projects

5th April 2021

How to Procure an eProcurement System that Generates More Value from Your Budget

1st April 2021

The Technology Solutions Vital to Clerk Productivity in Our Post-Pandemic Communities

18th March 2021
view all

Events


PODCAST


Young Leaders Episode 4 – Cyril Jefferson – City Councilman, High Point, North Carolina

13th October 2020

Young Leaders Episode 3 – Shannon Hardin – City Council President, Columbus, Ohio

27th July 2020

Young Leaders Episode 2 – Christian Williams – Development Services Planner, Goodyear, Ariz.

1st July 2020
view all

Twitter


AmerCityCounty

The Community Game Changer: Library Outsourcing dlvr.it/RxLd6r

9th April 2021
AmerCityCounty

Cooperative contracts can be an entryway for small and diverse companies to successfully compete for government sal… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…

9th April 2021
AmerCityCounty

Electric slide: Mayors form collaborative organization to purchase electric vehicles for cities dlvr.it/RxGsHY

8th April 2021
AmerCityCounty

Celebrating the unsung heroes of the COVID-19 pandemic: Procurement professionals dlvr.it/RxGsG2

8th April 2021
AmerCityCounty

Expanding opportunities: Nebraska’s bold procurement Concierge Program dlvr.it/RxGpyr

8th April 2021
AmerCityCounty

All activities monitored: The 10 most surveilled major cities in the U.S. dlvr.it/RxCKzy

7th April 2021
AmerCityCounty

Denver anticipates autonomous vehicles with cross-agency, cross-sector collaborative planning dlvr.it/RxC1dP

7th April 2021
AmerCityCounty

Revenue and zoning evolution prepares Seattle for an autonomous vehicle future dlvr.it/RxBzyC

7th April 2021

Newsletters

Sign up for American City & County’s newsletters to receive regular news and information updates about local governments.

Resale Insights Dashboard

The Resale Insights Dashboard provides model-level data for the entire used equipment market to help you save time and money.

Municipal Cost Index

Updated monthly since 1978, our exclusive Municipal Cost Index shows the effects of inflation on the cost of providing municipal services

Media Kit and Advertising

Want to reach our digital audience? Learn more here.

DISCOVER MORE FROM INFORMA TECH

  • IWCE’s Urgent Communications
  • IWCE Expo

WORKING WITH US

  • About Us
  • Contact Us

FOLLOW American City and County ON SOCIAL

  • Privacy
  • CCPA: “Do Not Sell My Data”
  • Cookies Policy
  • Terms
Copyright © 2021 Informa PLC. Informa PLC is registered in England and Wales with company number 8860726 whose registered and Head office is 5 Howick Place, London, SW1P 1WG.
This website uses cookies, including third party ones, to allow for analysis of how people use our website in order to improve your experience and our services. By continuing to use our website, you agree to the use of such cookies. Click here for more information on our Cookie Policy and Privacy Policy.
X