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by Robert Tannanwald
Third Quarter 2002
Readily available tax statistics tell state and local
policymakers the amount and mix of revenues that their
governments receive. However, these officials pose harder
fiscal questions than simply how much money is flowing
into their coffers and from what sources. They frequently
ask, What is our states capacity to raise revenues,
regardless of how much we actually collect? To what
extent do we utilize that capacity? Is our revenue capacity
sufficient to finance our states need for public
services? These questions are especially salient today,
given that during state fiscal year 2002 (FY2002) revenues
in most states fell far short of their targeted levels.
Questions surrounding the issue of fiscal adequacy
are difficult to answer definitively. In previous articles
appearing in this Review (Tannenwald 1998, 1999), we
evaluated interstate differences in fiscal capacity
and fiscal need for FY1994 and FY1996. Prior to these
efforts, the U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental
Relations (ACIR) developed indicators providing such
interstate comparisons for several (but not all) years
from FY1962 through FY1991. This article presents such
comparisons for FY1997.
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