Truth and Integrity in State Budgeting: What is the Reality?

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Truth and Integrity in State Budgeting: What is the Reality? William Glasgall Director, State and Local Program The Volcker Alliance https://www.volckeralliance.org/ wglasgall@volckeralliance.org 646-343-0152 @Wglasgall 40 th World Continuous Auditing & Reporting Symposium Rutgers Business School Newark, New Jersey November 4, 2017

Truth and Integrity in State Budgeting: Objectives Identify five key budgeting and financial reporting procedures Grade all states performance in each area Propose best practices for states to follow Continue evaluations annually in cooperation with university partners Help bolster university teaching of public budgeting and finance Encourage further university-based research based on Volcker Alliance research and findings 2

Drivers of Best Budgeting Practices When the Volcker Alliance first began examining state fiscal and financial reporting practices in 2014, we were driven by one question: What makes up a balanced budget? That led us in 2015 to report on California, New Jersey, and Virginia, and now, all 50 states. Even the nation s third-longest recovery since 1858 has not warded off fiscal crises for some states. Weak revenue growth challenges states ability to pay bills for infrastructure, Medicaid, education, and public worker pensions and retiree health care. Unpaid obligations in these areas probably exceed the $2.2 trillion in annual state revenue. Cash-based budgeting allows states to push some costs to future generations to keep budgets balanced in accordance with constitutions, statutes, or traditions. Best practices for state budgeting cannot successfully bolster fiscal stability and informed policymaking without political will to adopt and apply them for the long term. Establishing and maintaining strong and transparent budget processes and practices is a concern not only for the states themselves but for the entire economy. 3

The Volcker Alliance Research Network Universities Arizona State Cornell CUNY Fla. International Georgia State U of Kentucky U of Minnesota U of California- Berkeley U of Illinois-Chicago U of Illinois-Springfield U of Utah Consultants MMA Barrett & Greene New Research: -Debt Management -Transparency -Infrastructure -Economic Health Truth and Integrity in State Budgeting: Phase II (2018) 4

The State Fiscal Framework Record US recovery; modest growth (GDP +~2.2%/yr) Low inflation (CPI +~2.1%/yr) Low unemployment (~4%) Slowly rising interest rates (10-year Treasuries @ 2.5% 17, 3.1% 18). Means muni rates may stay low, but tax reform may diminish demand Slow revenue growth (~3-3.5%); revenues/gdp ~2005 level of 10% Modest spending growth, still < historical 5.5% avg. State infrastructure spending lowest since mid-1990s. Budget pressure points: Pensions/OPEB, Medicaid, Infrastructure, K-12 Likely increases in rainy day fund contributions Little enthusiasm for new muni debt (issuance ~$380b in 17 vs. $422b in 16), but Harvey/Maria rebuilding may change that Source: Volcker Alliance, Bloomberg, Rockefeller Institute of Government, MMA, NASBO, Urban Institute

The State Fiscal Squeeze Source: Urban Institute, from US Census data 6

5 Budgetary Best Practices & Areas of Inquiry Budget Forecasting Use a consensus approach to establishing single, binding numbers for revenues and expenditures. Provide long-term estimates. (Example: Washington) Budget Accounting Pay for expenditures in the same year they are accrued; avoid deferring them. Shift from cash-based accounting to modified accrual accounting techniques used in state/local CAFRs. (Example: NYC) Legacy Costs (Pensions & OPEB) Consistently make contributions actuaries determine to be necessary. (Example: Wisconsin). While some states may find it a crippling burden to fully cover costs of future benefits and past underfunding, they should consider committing to move toward full funding in the future. OPEB plans should be adequately funded to ensure benefits can be paid when bills come due (Example: Utah) Fiscal Reserve Funds Enact clear policies for withdrawals from rainy day and other fiscal reserves, as well as rules for replenishing spent funds and tying the size of fund balances to revenue volatility. (Example: Indiana) Transparency Construct a consolidated budget website (Colorado). Include full disclosure of cost to replace depreciated infrastructure (Examples: Alaska, California). 7

Forecasting: 9 states graded A Maneuvers: 22 states graded A Legacy Costs: 8 states graded A Key Findings: Best-Graded States Reserve Funds: 15 states graded A Transparency: 2 states graded A 8

Key Findings: Lowest-Graded States Forecasting: 4 states graded D Maneuvers: 6 states graded D Legacy Costs: 9 states graded D- Reserve Funds: 3 states graded D Transparency: 3 states graded D 9

A Note on Methodology The Volcker Alliance joined with professors and students in public finance and budgeting programs at eleven US universities who answered a standardized set of research questions on budget procedures. University research network gathered data from a variety of sources, interviewed current and former state budget and financial officials, and examined budget documents and financial disclosure filings. Responses to questions were reviewed by faculty advisers at the universities and Alliance consultants and revised, if necessary. Responses were then reviewed and normalized to account for any discrepancies among researchers findings. The focus on states adherence to best practices, combined with the normalization process, resulted in a relatively high level of comparability among the fifty states budgetary performance. States received a grade ranging from A to D-minus for each of the five budget categories for fiscal 2015, 2016, and 2017. Every state s average category score over the period was used to determine a three-year average grade. Sustained improvement or decline in a state s score over the three fiscal years was used to identify trends in budgetary performance in each category: Budget Forecasting was graded on five indicators, each representing 20% of the category score. We asked if a state used a consensus revenue forecast; employed a reasonable rationale for revenue growth projections (based on historical revenue and economic growth trends); successfully avoided having to make a negative midyear budget adjustment; and produced multiyear revenue and expenditure forecasts. Budget Maneuvers was graded on a state s use of one-time actions to create short-term budget fixes. States received 25% of the category grade for each type of one-time budget maneuver they successfully avoided. They included funding recurring expenses with debt; funding recurring expenses with the proceeds of asset sales or by tapping future revenues; deferring a current year s recurring expenditures; and covering general fund expenditures with transfers from other funds. Legacy Costs was graded on a state s willingness to meet public employee pension and OPEB obligations. Thirty percent of a grade was determined by a state s making its OPEB actuarially required or determined contribution. Seventy percent of the category grade was scored on whether the state made its pension ADC or ARC contribution and on its pension funding ratio as of 2015, which represents the amount of assets available to cover promised benefits. Reserve Funds was graded on a state s performance on four equally weighted budget indicators: If a state had a reserve fund disbursement policy; existence of a reserve fund replenishment policy; if reserves were tied to historic trends in revenue volatility; whether there was a positive reserve or general fund balance at the beginning of each fiscal year. Transparency was graded on the extensiveness and usefulness of a state s fiscal disclosure practices. States received 25% of their grade for each of four transparency measures: providing the public with a consolidated budget website; disclosing outstanding debt and debt-service cost tables; providing information on deferred infrastructure maintenance costs; and providing cost estimates for tax expenditures. 10

Key Budget Terms Actuarially required contribution (ARC) Sometimes used interchangeably with actuarially determined contribution (ADC). Both refer to the amount that a retirement system s actuaries have determined will adequately fund promised pension or other postemployment benefits accruing to current employees in a given year, as well as the cost of amortizing unfunded liabilities from past years. Bond premium Excess over par value that is paid to purchase a bond. Comprehensive annual financial report (CAFR) Report meeting Governmental Accounting Standards Board recommendations that includes a state or local government s audited financial statements for the fiscal year as well as other information. General fund is reconciled to CAFR via Budget-to-Actual statement, but data may be too late for policymaking purposes. General fund budget Main vehicle for financing a state or locality s day-to-day operations, Most states also have a capital budget for long-lived assets such as infrastructure. Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) Body that sets standards for financial accounting and reporting practices by states and municipalities. Modified accrual basis of accounting Method of accounting that recognizes revenues in the accounting period in which they become available and measurable. Other postemployment benefits (OPEB) Future liabilities incurred by certain governmental entities for benefits other than pensions, such as medical care, provided to retired public employees. Rainy day fund Fiscal reserve that governments can tap to balance the budget or respond to emergencies. Some states maintain general fund balances as a supplement or substitute. 11

Budgetary Accounting and Financial Auditing Concerns Use of cash accounting for budgets rather than GAAP/modified accrual; inconsistencies from state to state and year to year hinder comparisons. Budget-to-Actual Statement in CAFR of some help, but data may be too late for policy purposes. Lack of uniform disclosure of tax abatements. TK states have no tax expenditure budget; GASB 77 a partial solution; rare to see programs reevaluated for effectiveness or meeting legislative goals. Inconsistency in revenue and expenditure estimation from state to state and year to year; many states lack multiyear forecasts, stresstesting. Inconsistent or incomplete valuation of assets (land, revenuegenerating operations). Absence of standard methodology for valuing replacement cost of depreciated infrastructure GASB once debated this. No GASB authority over budgeting why?

Volcker Alliance State Budget Grades and Credit Ratings: How They Are Different

State Grades and Credit Ratings: Budget Forecasting A1 Aa2 Baa3 Sources: Volcker Alliance, Moody s Investors Service, Bloomberg 14

State Grades and Credit Ratings: Budget Maneuvers Aa3 Aa2 Baa3 A3 Aa3 Sources: Volcker Alliance, Moody s Investors Service, Bloomberg 15

State Grades and Credit Ratings: Legacy Costs Aa2 Baa3 A3 Aa3 Source: Volcker Alliance, Moody s Investors Service, Bloomberg 16

State Grades and Credit Ratings: Reserve Funds Aa3 Aa3 Sources: Volcker Alliance, Moody s Investors Service, Bloomberg 17

State Grades and Credit Ratings: Transparency Aa3 Aa3 Sources: Volcker Alliance, Moody s Investors Service, Bloomberg 18

Discussion and Questions 19