Budget + Tax

Illinois’ congressional delegation proposes radical changes to government spending

Illinois’ congressional delegation proposes radical changes to government spending

by Brian Costin When it comes to proposing radical changes to government spending, Illinois Democrats vastly outdo Illinois Republicans. In fact, a group of five liberal Democrats from Illinois propose spending increases that dwarf the spending cut proposals of any Republican in the country by a wide margin. This information comes from a new National Taxpayers...

Illinois General Assembly continues to ignore the basics of good public policy

Illinois General Assembly continues to ignore the basics of good public policy

by Ben VanMetre Illinois has a spending problem. State government spending has grown at three times the rate of inflation since 1990. Despite Illinois’ existing balanced budget requirement, the state hasn’t had a balanced budget since 2001. That’s because political leadership in Illinois has been ignoring the basics of good public policy for decades. Lawmakers had the...

Moody’s downgrades Illinois credit rating: 13th credit downgrade under Quinn

Moody’s downgrades Illinois credit rating: 13th credit downgrade under Quinn

by Ted Dabrowski Moody’s Investors Service downgraded Illinois’ credit rating to “A3” from “A2” after the General Assembly failed to move forward on pension reform before the end of the spring legislative session. The rating agency also says it has a negative outlook on Illinois’ credit: “The negative outlook reflects our expectation that Illinois’ pension...

Session wrap up: move against progressive income tax continues to gain momentum

Session wrap up: move against progressive income tax continues to gain momentum

Illinois lawmakers want to pass another multibillion dollar tax increase in Illinois in the form of a progressive income tax. That discussion materialized earlier this year when state Rep. Naomi Jakobsson, D-Urbana, proposed an amendment (HJRCA 2) to swap out Illinois’ constitutionally protected flat rate income tax for a progressive tax. The plan is to make permanent...

By Benjamin VanMetre

Fitch downgrades Illinois after lawmakers fail to pass pension reform

Fitch downgrades Illinois after lawmakers fail to pass pension reform

by Ted Dabrowski Fitch Ratings downgraded Illinois’ credit rating to “A-” from “A” after the General Assembly failed to move forward on pension reform before the end of the spring legislative session. In its statement announcing the downgrade, Fitch called Illinois’ pension liability “unsustainable” and said it was concerned about the state being able to...

Illinois General Assembly reverses Quinn’s education budget cuts

Illinois General Assembly reverses Quinn’s education budget cuts

Just a few months ago, the big education news in Illinois was Gov. Pat Quinn’s proposed $400 million cut to the General State Aid for Education budget – the state’s single-largest education expenditure. This article in the Chicago Tribune captured the frantic pleas of school boards, administrators and teachers at the time: Roger Eddy, a former state...

By Benjamin VanMetre

Illinois’ pension system has spiraled so out of control that not even the architects of the system can fix it

Illinois’ pension system has spiraled so out of control that not even the architects of the system can fix it

Like many, we are disappointed that pension reform was not enacted during the spring legislative session. But make no mistake: the Madigan and Cullerton pension proposals were not pension reform. Taxpayers should be relieved they did not pass. Right now, the job of Illinois government is to provide for the well-being of all the people....

Will Illinois legislators break their promise to reduce taxes?

Will Illinois legislators break their promise to reduce taxes?

by Ted Dabrowski and Paul Schumacher In 2011, when Illinois legislators passed the largest income tax increase in the state’s history, they promised to roll back the increase beginning in 2015.  “We have some temporary tax increases that are designed to pay our bills, get Illinois back on fiscal sound footing and make sure that our state...

The truth behind Illinois’ FY 2014 budget: broken promises and future tax hikes

The truth behind Illinois’ FY 2014 budget: broken promises and future tax hikes

The Illinois General Assembly increased spending to more than $35.4 billion, up approximately $2 billion from what was approved for the current fiscal year. The budget handouts being passed around the Statehouse describe this as an “honest budget,” the same language Gov. Pat Quinn used when he proposed his version of a budget back in March....

By Benjamin VanMetre

Illinois’ FY 2014 budget: chock-full of waste

Illinois’ FY 2014 budget: chock-full of waste

by Ben VanMetre A few years ago there was a popular narrative in Illinois politics about going through the budget line by line and eliminating wasteful spending. Those efforts, of course, never moved forward, and the narrative is dead. That’s a common theme in Springfield, where lawmakers make promises they don’t intend to keep. It...

Moody’s warns Illinois credit rating could fall without pension reform

Moody’s warns Illinois credit rating could fall without pension reform

In what’s become a habit for Moody’s Investors Service, the credit rating agency warned today that Illinois faces more credit downgrades if it fails once again to reform its state-run pension systems. The state already has the lowest credit rating in the nation. This means Illinois pays more to borrow money than any other state. But what’s...

The SB 1687 cost shift doesn’t go far enough

The SB 1687 cost shift doesn’t go far enough

A “cost shift” pension plan was introduced today, Senate Bill 1687 Amendment #2, for the State Universities Retirement System, or SURS. Here are the ins and outs of the plan: What the cost shift does: A significant driver of Illinois’ $97 billion pension crisis is the fact that the state makes pension contributions to SURS...

By Benjamin VanMetre

Cullerton’s pension plan full of flawed logic

Cullerton’s pension plan full of flawed logic

A union coalition opposed to pension reform is arguing that a plan advanced by Senate President John Cullerton would save $26 billion more in retiree health care coverage costs than a plan backed by House Speaker Michael Madigan. From the Associated Press: A study by the We Are One Illinois coalition shows that if half of...

By Jonathan Ingram