Budget + Tax

Out of Sync: Government and Private Employee Compensation in Illinois

Out of Sync: Government and Private Employee Compensation in Illinois

Executive Summary Since the January 2011 tax hike, Illinoisans have seen more of their household budgets go to shoulder the growing cost of government employee compensation packages – packages made up of overly generous pay and perks that many can only dream of. Righting this imbalance is one of the great social justice questions facing...

By Chris Andriesen

Quinn’s “Cuts”

Quinn’s “Cuts”

by Amanda Griffin-Johnson On Thursday, Gov. Quinn signed the budget for fiscal year 2012, which begins today. As governor, he has the power to make line item vetoes and reductions to the budget passed by the General Assembly. In his budget announcement, Gov. Quinn claims to have made $376.4 million in budget cuts, but looking deeper...

Pain at the Pump: How Illinois Taxes Drive Up the Cost of Gas

Pain at the Pump: How Illinois Taxes Drive Up the Cost of Gas

The Problem As families make their Fourth of July travel plans, motorists in Illinois are feeling the pinch especially hard. National surveys continually find that Chicago tops the list of highest average gas prices in the country. Latest numbers show that as of June 27, the average gasoline price in Chicago is $3.98, compared to...

New Study Highlights Significant Cost of Pension Crisis

New Study Highlights Significant Cost of Pension Crisis

by Amanda Griffin-Johnson A new study by Robert Novy-Marx of the University of Rochester and Joshua Rauh of the Kellogg School of Management calculated the contribution increases that would be necessary to fully fund state and local pension systems across the U.S. over the next 30 years. The study found that in Illinois, annual government contributions would have to increase...

One Day in Springfield

One Day in Springfield

by Mark Cavers Legislators came and went from Springfield yesterday without making significant changes to the budget. We were told that the budget they passed is actually a pretty good one. But, as the Institute’s CEO John Tillman argued on FOX this morning, we are in fact spending more than we did last year. Still, legislators...

Video from the Budget FAIL Press Conference

Video from the Budget FAIL Press Conference

Before the Illinois General Assembly began its spring session extension on June 22, the Illinois Policy Institute held a press conference in Springfield to present our latest report, “Budget FAIL: Plan Awaiting Gov. Quinn’s Signature Grows Spending, Debt.” The report shows that the 2012 budget is not a reduction in spending and does little to...

Budget FAIL: Plan Awaiting Gov. Quinn’s Signature Grows Spending, Debt

Budget FAIL: Plan Awaiting Gov. Quinn’s Signature Grows Spending, Debt

State spending will increase in 2012. That is, unless additional cuts and policy changes are added to the general fund budget currently awaiting Gov. Quinn’s signature. Following the close of the spring session, many news outlets reported that the House and Senate had passed a 2012 general fund budget of $33.2 billion that cut overall...

By Collin Hitt

Budget FAIL: Plan Awaiting Gov. Quinn’s Signature Grows Spending, Debt

Budget FAIL: Plan Awaiting Gov. Quinn’s Signature Grows Spending, Debt

State spending will increase in 2012. That is, unless additional cuts and policy changes are added to the general fund budget currently awaiting Gov. Quinn’s signature. Following the close of the spring session, many news outlets reported that the House and Senate had passed a 2012 general fund budget of $33.2 billion that cut overall...

By Chris Andriesen

Amazon Tax, Short-lived?

Amazon Tax, Short-lived?

by Mark Cavers The Amazon tax, which became law in January, is bad for businesses, workers, and families. Last week, Performance Marketing Associates brought a lawsuit against the Illinois Department of Revenuechallenging the constitutionality of the law. As far back as last year, executive vice president, Kristina Rasmussen warned that if the bill passed companies would flee Illinois. The day...

Capital Bill: Here We Go Again

Capital Bill: Here We Go Again

by Mark Cavers At the tail end of the legislative session the Illinois State Senate added $430 million in operating costs to this year’s capital bill, a move that was opposed by the House, which refused to consider the bill. Today Governor Quinn announced that capital and road construction programs will begin to shutdown as early as...

Earn Up To $5,000 Cash by Saving Taxpayers Money

Earn Up To $5,000 Cash by Saving Taxpayers Money

by Aon Hussain Want to save Illinois taxpayers some green and earn a little bit of your own? Instead of asking citizens to play the lottery, the State of Illinois is ready to give regular citizens big cash prizes if they come up with some fruitful ideas to save the state some bucks. The Illinois...

College Retirees vs. Colleges: SURS’ Costs to Surpass All other Higher Education Spending

College Retirees vs. Colleges: SURS’ Costs to Surpass All other Higher Education Spending

Policy makers struggling to protect higher education appropriations may be surprised to learn this fact: The total cost of the State Universities Retirement System (SURS) in 2012 will exceed the amount of general funds appropriated to all other higher education agencies and institutions. Years of overly generous pensions and delayed funding by the Illinois legislature...

By Collin Hitt

Why Tax the Rich Isn’t the Answer on Pensions

Why Tax the Rich Isn’t the Answer on Pensions

by Mark Cavers Rather than coming to the table to try and help save their members’ pensions, union officials seem content to vilify the wealthy in Illinois. Yesterday, while discussing the pension reform bill in committee, the head of AFSCME argued that all we need to do is raise taxes on the rich and our pension problem...

Failing to Pass Pension Reform Will Hurt State Recruitment, Retention

Failing to Pass Pension Reform Will Hurt State Recruitment, Retention

by Kristina Rasmussen Echoing the sentiments of former Gov. Jim Edgar, state rep Daniel Biss made the argument that pension reform will hurt state government employee recruitment in a committee hearing yesterday. From the Tribune’s editorial: Then there’s Daniel Biss, a freshman Democrat from Evanston. In blather-rich questions and a pre-vote soliloquy, he illogically twisted his proclaimed...