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States' Fiscal Health

States' Fiscal Health

 
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News

Pew's States’ Fiscal Health initiative provides data, analysis, and guidance to help states navigate their fiscal challenges and identify and understand potential policy approaches. We examine key issues and promising approaches on both sides of the ledger—revenues and expenditures. Explore news about our work below.

Project News

Media Coverage

  • February 21, 2012

    Retirement: Public Pensions Get an Overhaul

    In the words of some politicians and pundits, public-pension reform isn't a liberal or conservative issue -- it's a reality issue. The money's just not there to fund the kind of retirement that state workers have come to expect. Reality checks led to a record number of pension-plan changes in 41 states in 2010 and 2011, as lawmakers tried to patch the cracks in the public nest egg.

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  • January 17, 2012

    States' Fiscal Future Starts To Look A Bit Brighter

    As the U.S. economy struggled to get back on its feet over the past few years, a lot of states found themselves contending with big budget deficits. They responded by firing workers, raising taxes and cutting spending. Now the fiscal picture for a lot of states is brightening a bit—but many still face enormous challenges.

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  • December 1, 2011

    As U.S., Europe Hack At Budgets, Pensions Get Sliced

    Despite boasting one of the highest per capita incomes in the country, San Jose, Calif., is running large and growing deficits. The main reason is pensions and other benefits for retired city workers, such as health insurance. San Jose's problems are severe, but hardly unique. In recent years, pension costs have become a central concern both in the U.S. and in Europe.

     

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  • November 14, 2011

    Rhode Island Struggles With Pension Overhaul

    Rhode Island has dug its pension system into a big hole: It's $9 billion in the red. The nation's smallest state doesn't even have half of the money it needs to pay future retirees.

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  • November 3, 2011

    Analysis: Economy's Shifts Erode States' Tax Bases

    State governments across the United States are just a few months into their fiscal years and already many fear that tax revenues are running short of forecasts. This is getting to be an annual ritual. Officials in New York, California, Florida and Washington this year have all expressed concerns about the outlook.

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  • July 28, 2011

    States Warily Watch Debt-Ceiling Impasse

    The debt-ceiling debate in Washington is being watched closely in state capitals, as a U.S. default, or a lowering of the country's bond rating, will have a ripple effect in states and communities across the nation. more

  • July 25, 2011

    Party Leaders Dismiss Rival Debt Plans as Debate Hits Home Stretch

    With little more than a week until the debt-ceiling deadline, lawmakers on both sides of Capitol Hill offered competing plans today on how to avert a crisis. 

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  • July 25, 2011

    How a Default Could Devastate the Country

    As negotiations over a major deficit reduction package appear to be going nowhere over the weekend, federal and state officials, financial and corporate executives, and average investors and consumers suddenly face the very real threat of the first-ever default on U.S. debt, a possibility that once seemed unthinkable. more

  • July 21, 2011

    States Brace for Debt Ceiling Default

    Just the threat of a federal default is prompting California to get a $5 billion loan to make sure it can pay its obligations. States around the nation are drawing up contingency plans in the event that federal policymakers don't resolve the debt ceiling impasse by Aug. 2.

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  • July 20, 2011

    Pew: Default Would Hit Capital Projects

    Failure to raise the federal debt ceiling could cripple state and city capital projects across the country, including wiping out funding for building schools and roads, according to a report on Wednesday. more

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