North Dakota leads all states in tax collection since Great Recession.
Link here.
North Dakota once again leads all states in
revenue recovery following the Great Recession as it rides stable growth
in the Oil Patch even as the farm economy struggles.
Since the peak quarter during the
Great Recession, which ran from 2007 to 2009, state tax receipts in
North Dakota have risen 71.2% as of the second quarter of 2019,
outpacing all other states, according to an analysis by the Pew Charitable Trusts.
North
Dakota’s revenue growth was even more impressive as of the end of 2014,
when oil prices were soaring, the Oil Patch was booming and state tax
receipts skyrocketed 123.9% from their Great Recession peak.
“It’s
nice to see we’re in a phase of continued, sustainable growth in all of
our revenues,” said Ryan Rauschenberger, state tax commissioner.
Minnesota
and South Dakota also were among 45 states where tax revenues rebounded
since the recession, and among 16 states that had tax revenue growth
exceeding 15%. Tax receipts rose 28.8% in Minnesota and 22.4% in South
Dakota.
The state collects an estimated $250,000 in sales taxes for every oil
well that is drilled, for example. Similarly, he said, job expansion
from petroleum development spurs income tax growth.
“It’s
not just oil revenue that’s growing,” he said. So far this biennium,
tax receipts are running ahead of projections made last April.
“Across
the board we are ahead of forecast,” Rauschenberger said. “We feel
pretty comfortable with where we’re at with our general fund budget.”
On
Tuesday, Jan. 7, Rauschenberger’s office announced that taxable sales
and purchases for July, August and September of 2019 were $5.852
billion, a 4% increase over those months in 2018.
“We’re actually collecting more in a month than we were in a year
before the Bakken (boom)” when production was less than 200,000 barrels
per day, Rauschenberger said.
Last
year, when Pew ran an earlier comparison, North Dakota tax revenues had
rebounded 58.7% since the peak of the Great Recession, the highest of
all states. That compared to a gain of 27.2% for Minnesota and 21.6% for
South Dakota.
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