Illinois’ backlog of unpaid bills totals $4.4 billion
Illinois’ backlog of unpaid bills totals $4.4 billion
Illinois began August with a $4.4 billion dollar backlog of unpaid bills. If lawmakers would have kept the promises they made in 2011, the backlog would be zero today – or close to it. In January 2011, Illinois lawmakers pushed through a record tax hike that raised the income tax rate on individuals to 5...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Nation’s worst credit rating costs Illinois millions more in interest payments
Nation’s worst credit rating costs Illinois millions more in interest payments
Illinois has the lowest credit rating in the nation. And just like people with poor credit scores, the state must pay higher interest rates. Higher rates mean higher interest payments that drain the budget and leave less money for education, health care and public safety. For every $1 billion of new borrowing, Illinois taxpayers are...
By Benjamin VanMetre
The sad but true history of Illinois’ credit rating
The sad but true history of Illinois’ credit rating
Illinois has the lowest credit rating in the nation. The sad truth is Illinois hasn’t been a AAA-rated state since February 1979 – when a gallon of gas cost less than a dollar and the Dow Jones Industrial Average hovered in the low 800s. The state’s credit rating has been in a downward spiral ever...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Quinn passes the buck on cell-phone tax hike, Chicago cashes in
Quinn passes the buck on cell-phone tax hike, Chicago cashes in
Back on June 6, Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn signed legislation authorizing Chicago city officials to enact a 56 percent per-line 911 fee hike. This measure gave the city of Chicago the authority to raise the city’s per-line 911 fee to $3.90 from the old fee of $2.50. It didn’t take long for Chicago City Council...
By Austin Berg
Capital bill waste shows need for reform
Capital bill waste shows need for reform
Illinois is often seen as the poster child when it comes to bloated government, wasteful spending and public corruption. As a recent WICS news story highlighted, Illinois’ capital bill is a perfect example of why the state holds such a reputation: the state budget is chock full of wasteful spending and pet projects. Take Decatur...
By Benjamin VanMetre
S&P to Illinois: prepare for next downgrade
S&P to Illinois: prepare for next downgrade
Standard & Poor’s Rating Services revised Illinois’ credit outlook to “negative” from “developing” on July 23. Illinois’ current S&P rating is A-, the lowest of any state in the country. With this revision, S&P and the other major rating agency in the country, Moody’s Investors Service, are once again on the same page. Both companies...
By John Klingner
Analysis of GOP gubernatorial candidate Bruce Rauner’s ‘Bring Back Blueprint’
Analysis of GOP gubernatorial candidate Bruce Rauner’s ‘Bring Back Blueprint’
Illinois GOP gubernatorial candidate Bruce Rauner released yesterday another portion of his “Bring Back Blueprint,” acknowledging Illinois’ jobs crisis and identifying many of the pain points that make Illinois the lowest performing state in the Midwest, economically. The Illinois Policy Institute has reviewed Rauner’s proposal, and while the plan is not perfect, it addresses many...
By Michael Lucci, Benjamin VanMetre
Piling it on: Fitch downgrades Cook County
Piling it on: Fitch downgrades Cook County
Cook County residents got more bad news last week when Fitch Ratings, the global rating agency, downgraded Cook County’s debt to A+ from AA-. The rating agency cited skyrocketing pension costs as one of the key reasons for the credit downgrade. The most direct impact of the downgrade is higher borrowing costs for Cook County. Infrastructure and...
End the crony slush fund that is the Ex-Im Bank
End the crony slush fund that is the Ex-Im Bank
An important debate about the future of the Export-Import Bank of the United States is raging in Congress and in the media. The House Financial Services Committee held a hearing last month to ask if the bank was “corporate necessity or corporate welfare?” The Ex-Im Bank originated as a New Deal-era program, financing loans to...
By Bryant Jackson-Green
Chicago gas prices $0.53 higher than national average
Chicago gas prices $0.53 higher than national average
Just as travelers prepare to hit the road to celebrate Independence Day weekend, national gas prices have risen to levels not seen since 2008. And though prices have dropped slightly in Chicago, the price for a gallon of gas is still higher than it was last year, according to AAA. Today, the average price per...
By Hilary Gowins
Speeding ticket can cost you more than $900 in Illinois
Speeding ticket can cost you more than $900 in Illinois
It’s Independence Day weekend. You’re driving out to the suburbs, into the city, up to a lake or maybe down to the state capital. You’re going 15 miles per hour over the speed limit. Lights flash. You hear: “License and registration please.” You’re on the hook for $120. Or so you think. In reality, the...
By Austin Berg
Illinois FY 2015 budget paves way for income tax hike sunset, but falls short overall
Illinois FY 2015 budget paves way for income tax hike sunset, but falls short overall
On June 30, Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn signed the state budget for the next fiscal year, which starts July 1. The good news is that this budget does not make the 2011 state income tax increase permanent; all Illinois taxpayers are still on track to see income tax relief next year. The bad news is...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Lawmakers should stand firm in tax-hike extension opposition during lame-duck session
Lawmakers should stand firm in tax-hike extension opposition during lame-duck session
Taxpayers finally scored a victory in Illinois. Lawmakers kept their promise and passed a budget slated to provide income tax relief starting in January 2015. But a threat to that relief still looms large. After the November election this fall, current lawmakers will meet for a final time in January for their lame-duck session. There’s...
By Benjamin VanMetre
‘Keep Your Promise’: IL lawmakers must let temporary tax hikes sunset
‘Keep Your Promise’: IL lawmakers must let temporary tax hikes sunset
Temporary tax hikes notoriously stick around longer than planned. Pennsylvania passed a 10 percent tax on alcohol to pay for damage from a flood in 1936. The state continued to levy the tax after the flood damage was paid for. Today the rate is 18 percent. But lawmakers across the country have been better at...
By Benjamin VanMetre