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ESTIMATING STATE SHARED MUNICIPAL REVENUES
FOR FISCAL YEAR 1997

By Anne Masters, Staff Accountant, Illinois Municipal League

I. SUMMARY OF FISCAL YEARS 1996 AND 1997

The Illinois Municipal League estimates of income and sales tax growth due to growth in the Illinois economy and adjusting for formula changes, will continue at 5 percent for income tax and 5.5 percent for sales tax growth through the end of Municipal Fiscal Year 1996 (MFY 96) on April 30, 1996.

For next year, MFY 97, we believe income and sales tax growth will slow by 0.5 percent, to 4.5 percent for income tax and 5 percent for sales tax growth. In other words, we don't believe a recession will hit the Illinois economy before May 1997.

January 1995
Estimate of MFY 1996
Per Capita Receipts

November 1995
Estimate of MFY 1996
Per Capita Receipts

November 1995
Estimate of MFY 1997
Per Capita Receipts
Local Government Distribution Fund (LGDF):
$54.40

$55.00

$59.00

Motor Fuel Tax:

$21.30

$23.00

$23.00
State Use Tax:

$7.70

$7.10

$7.40

Photoprocessing Tax:

$1.75

$1.75

$1.80

Total Estimated Per Capita Revenue:

$85.15

$86.85 $91.20

 

II. INCOME TAX

Our January 1995 estimate of $54.40 per person will be about $.60 low because the Illinois income tax is growing with the Illinois economy at a rate higher than our 5% projection. Actual receipts in the first six months reflect a 7.3% increase in the economy plus the effect of the formula increase beginning with the August 1994 and August 1995 distributions. Our November 1995 estimate for MFY 96 is $55.00.

For MFY 1997 we estimate 4.5% growth in receipts due to growth in the State economy. In addition, May, June, and July 1996 receipts will also be an extra 10% higher due to those being the last three months where the distribution formula is higher than the prior year.

LOCAL SHARE OF STATE INCOME TAX
(in dollars per capita)

 

MFY 1997
Estimate

MFY 1996
Estimate

1996
Adjusted
% Growth

MFY 1995
Actual

1995
Adjusted
% Growth

MFY 1994
Actual
MAY

$5.45

4.7%°

$4.77

2.6%

$4.65

JUNE

5.04

17.6°

3.93

8.6

3.62

JULY

5.28

4.5°

4.63

16.0

3.99

AUGUST

3.41°°°°

7.3°°°

2.89°°

5.5°

2.51

SEPTEMBER

3.71

3.5°°°

3.26

9.1°

2.74

OCTOBER

5.54

7.0°°°

4.71

7.9°

4.00

NOVEMBER

5.0°°°

3.08

10.7°

2.55

DECEMBER

5.0°°°

3.08

8.2°

2.61

JANUARY

5.0°°°

4.01

-2.8°

3.78

FEBRUARY

5.0°°°

5.13

6.6°

4.41

MARCH

5.0°°°

3.04

5.2°

2.65

APRIL

5.0°°°

4.69

10.8°

3.88

FY TOTAL

59.00

55.00

47.22

41.39

FY % CHG

7.3

16.5

14.1

4.0


 

Source: IL Department of Revenue

Entries in Bold are IML Estimates

  °Reduced to show growth in total tax, not the formula change from 1/12th to 1/11th which first appears on this chart at °°.
°°First month of receipts at 1/11th of income tax versus 1/12th.
°°°Reduced to show growth in total tax, not the formula change from 1/11th to 1/l0th which first appears at °°°°.
°°°°First month of receipts at 1/l0th of income tax versus 1/11th.

November 1995 / Illinois Municipal Review / Page 13


III. SALES, OR MUNICIPAL RETAILERS OCCUPATION TAX (MROT)

MFY 96 receipts of municipal sales tax have been strong, increasing at a 5.0% rate in the first six months of the fiscal year. We estimate the total for MFY 96 to be $1.02 billion for municipal sales taxes from the 1% Municipal Retailers Occupation, Servicemen's Occupation and Use Tax (titled or registered items only). This represents 5.6% growth from MFY 95.

For MFY 97 we estimate total revenue of $1.07 billion, or 4.9% more than MFY 96.

Please keep in mind that an estimate of total statewide municipal sales tax revenue is not particularly helpful in your forecast of local sales tax receipts. Your receipts will vary depending on the wide swings in retail sales as stores open and close, or the local economy expands or contracts.

MUNICIPAL SALES TAX
(thousands of dollars)

   

FY 97
PROJ

FY 96
EST

FY 95

FY 94

FY 93

FY 92

MAY

72,965

70,293

66,086

61,675

57,582

JUNE

80,882

74,859

69,042

63,712

64,001

JULY

80,032

78,071

68,948

67,674

66,445

AUGUST

84,863

79,244

79,569

70,022

69,713

SEPTEMBER

89,327

85,522

76,239

75,306

70,922

OCTOBER

85,686

80,322

76,496

71,896

67,265

NOVEMBER

83,210

73,254

67,731

66,179

DECEMBER

79,166

70,183

70,398

66,771

JANUARY

80,130

77,997

71,641

60,607

FEBRUARY

82,496

78,476

71,676

66,417

MARCH

102,935

92,949

90,966

84,128

APRIL

69,730

66,870

60,718

60,836

FY TOTAL

1,070,000

1,020,000

965,978

896,109

843,415

800,866

FY % CHG

4.9

5.6

7.8

6.2

5.3

-2.3

Source: IL Department of Revenue


 

IV. MOTOR FUEL TAX (MFT)

Estimated MFY 96 motor fuel tax revenue is higher than last year's projected $21.30. We have raised our estimate to $23.00 for MFT receipts ending 4/30/96.

For MFY 97, IML staff estimates that MFT disbursements will stay at the same level as this year, or about $23.00 per capita.

Motor Fuel Tax revenue has become a static, or even a slowly declining source of per capita revenue for municipalities as average fuel economy continues to improve. In addition, the federal government's efforts under the Clean Air Act have negatively affected this revenue source in two ways. First, Vehicle Emissions Inspection costs are paid out of gross MFT receipts. Second, federal efforts to impose trip reduction requirements on the Clean Air Act nonattainment areas will also reduce receipts.

The only source of growth is the transfer each month of 1.7% of the State sales tax into the State's Motor Fuel Tax Fund as a proxy for the sales tax received from sales of motor fuel.

MUNICIPAL SHARE OF STATE MOTOR FUEL TAX
(dollars per capita)

 

FY 97
PROJ

FY 96
EST

FY 95

FY 94

FY 93

FY 92

FY 91

MAY

1.602

1.993

1.621

2.150•

1.564

1.766

JUNE

2.095

2.040

2.901••

1.538

1.444

1.694

JULY

2.423

2.033

1.868

1.862

2.089

1.747

AUGUST

1.948

1.674

1.676

1.712

1.808

1.722

SEPTEMBER

2.048

1.921

2.212

1.961

1.683

1.790

OCTOBER

1.854

1.869

1.659

1.558

1.978

1.920

NOVEMBER

1.708

1.629

1.803

1.521

1.699

DECEMBER

1.907

1.658

1.881

1.684

1.567

JANUARY

1.411

2.229

1.557

1.662

1.929

FEBRUARY

2.391

1.377

1.656

1.665

1.785

MARCH

1.605

1.754

1.358

1.666

1.476

APRIL

2.023

1.648

1.774

1.642

1.566

FY TOTAL

23.00

23.00

22.58

22.23

20.81

20.41

20.66

FY % CHG

0.0

1.9

1.6

6.8

2.0

-1.2

13.0


 

•INCLUDES 5 MONTHS OF SALES TAX TRANSFERS (9/91-1/92)
••INCLUDES 8 MONTHS OF SALES TAX TRANSFERS (9/92-4/93)

Source: Illinois Department of Transportation

Page 14 / Illinois Municipal Review /November 1995


V. LOCAL USE TAX

The use tax has become a rapidly rising revenue source as the Illinois Department of Revenue aggressively attempts to collect use tax on out of state catalog and electronic shopping. The increased state auditing and the voluntary use tax disclosure program appear to have been very successful. MFY 95 produced $6.94 per capita, an increase of 25.5% over MFY 94. MFY 96 receipts to date are running slightly lower than the previous year. IML staff has reduced its estimate for MFY 96 from $7.70 to $7.10 per capita, a 2.3% increase over MFY 95.

MFY 97 revenues should grow with the sales tax. We project MFY 97 use tax receipts will be $7.40, a 4.2% increase.

LOCAL SHARE OF THE STATE USE TAX
(in dollars per capita)

   

FY 97
PROJ

FY 96
EST

FY 95

FY 94

FY 93

FY 92

MAY

  0.45 0.49 0.34 0.31 0.38

JUNE

0.91 1.04 0.47 0.41 0.46
JULY 0.48 0.44 0.35 0.31 0.38
AUGUST 0.49 0.50 0.33 0.34 0.32

SEPTEMBER

0.57 0.50 0.72 0.45 0.40
OCTOBER 0.49 0.47 0.46 0.33 0.35
NOVEMBER 0.54 0.36 0.34 0.31
DECEMBER 0.66 0.57 0.46 0.47

JANUARY

0.49 0.44 0.62 0.29
FEBRUARY 0.53 0.50 0.62 0.35
MARCH 0.83 0.74 0.72 0.58
APRIL 0.45 0.25 0.34 0.40
FY TOTALS 7.40 7.10 6.94 5.53 5.25 4.69
FY % CHG 4.2 2.3 25.5 5.3 1.2 1.7

Source: Illinois Department of Revenue
Notes
Months underscored from 2/91 through 6/91 were not sent until 7/91
Month underscored for 6/92 was paid partly in 7/92
Month underscored for 3/94 was paid partly in 6/94
Months underscored for 4/94 and 5/94 were not sent until 6/94

Municipal records will not match this chart because appropriation for that year of those delays in making payments when revenues owed exceeded the maximum State appropriation for that year

VI. PHOTOPROCESSING SALES TAX

Photoprocessing sales tax receipts run parallel to the estimates for statewide sales tax, as they are a percentage of total State sales tax receipts, distributed on a per capita basis to municipalities.

MFY 95 photoprocessing sales tax disbursements were $1.69 per person, an increase of 6.3% over MFY 94. For MFY 96, we estimate $1.75 per person, an increase of 3.6%. For MFY 97, we estimate $1.80 per person, an increase of 2.9%.

LOCAL SHARE OF "PHOTOPROCESSING" TAX
(equal to .4% of state sales tax collections) :
   

FY 97
PROJ

FY 96
EST

FY 95

FY 94

FY 93

FY 92

MAY

 

0.132

0.126

0.123

0.117

0.154

JUNE

0.149 0.143 0.122 0.116 0.162
JULY 0.151 0.141 0.139 0.103 0.144
AUGUST 0.148 0.143 0.133 0.133 0.139
SEPTEMBER 0.149 0.146 0.132 0.129 0.138
OCTOBER 0.144 0.141 0.130 0.126 0.116
NOVEMBER 0.141 0.135 0.125 0.122
DECEMBER 0.137 0.132 0.121 0.116
JANUARY 0.158 0.156 0.143 0.133
FEBRUARY 0.165 0.148 0.136 0.135
MARCH 0.118 0.106 0.104 0.100
APRIL 0.133 0.132 0.123 0.116
FY TOTALS 1.80 1.75 1.69 1.59 1.48 1.58
FY % CHG 2.9 3.6 6.3 7.4 -6.3

Note: Underscored month indicates first month Chicago was included in distribution
Source: Illinois Department of Revenue

November 1995 / Illinois Municipal Review / Page 15


VII. CORPORATE PERSONAL PROPERTY REPLACEMENT TAX (CPPRT)

Since 1979, the Corporate Personal Property Replacement Taxes have been the most volatile and difficult to predict of all state-shared municipal revenues. The reason for this volatility is that over half the receipts come from the additional 2.5% corporate income tax. Corporate incomes fluctuate wildly as corporations move through the business cycle. Total Illinois corporate profits, and the taxes paid on them, can drop as much as 30% in a recession and then grow a similar amount during a strong economic recovery.

An additional difficulty in estimation arises due to the availability of an investment tax credit for corporations which can only be taken against the corporate replacement income tax, not the regular State corporate income tax. Illinois corporations have successfully convinced the Illinois General Assembly to create this tax credit and to provide for generous carryback and carryforward provisions which make forecasting corporate income subject to replacement tax a perilous adventure.

A measure of stability is found in the other source of replacement revenue, the .8% tax on the invested capital of utility companies. This revenue source has grown steadily, but has lagged as utility companies have restrained constructing new or refurbishing old distribution and generation systems.

The significant growth in corporate profits we forecasted in our August 1994 estimate had not appeared by January 1995 so we lowered our MFY 1995 estimate at that time from $750 million to $700 million. As you can see by the table, those higher profits did arrive beginning in March of 1995 and continue through the latest distribution in October. Those last six distributions (out of the statutorily established eight distributions per year) are up 17.6 percent over the previous year.

We have raised our MFY 96 estimate from $730 million to $830 million, an 11.9 percent increase over MFY 95. We believe that receipts will continue to rise in MFY 97, but at a lower 3.6 percent rate or an increase from $830 million to $860 million.

CORPORATE PERSONAL PROPERTY TAX REPLACEMENT REVENUE DISBURSEMENTS
(in thousands of dollars)

   

FY 97
PROJ

FY 96
EST

FY 95

FY 94

FY 93

FY 92

MAY

90,430

76,704

77,828

44,831

71,828

JULY

149,193

137,697

137,718

135,843

116,407

AUGUST

26,229

17,535

36,384

15,998

11,434

OCTOBER

153,707

135,136

123,187

91,514

112,268

DECEMBER

33,627

30,549

49,601

22,520

JANUARY

127,219

124,818

108,270

39,783

MARCH

38,991

24,791

23,251

74,607

APRIL

174,632

146,455

121,166

130,143

FY TOTAL

860,000

830,000

741,541

701,730

590,474

578,990

FY % CHG

3.6

11.9

5.7

18.8

2.0

-0.8


Source: Illinois Department of Revenue

Page 16 / Illinois Municipal Review / November 1995


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