North Carolina’s Strong Fiscal Condition and Opportunity for Growth | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's Note: This post appears here courtesy of the John Locke Foundation. The author of this post is Paige Terryberry.

    Thanks to fiscally conservative policies of spending restraint and saving, state debt continues to trend downward as highlighted in the Debt Affordability Advisory Committee's (the Committee) annual report submitted to the Governor and General Assembly last week. The report, spearheaded by North Carolina Treasurer Dale Folwell, advises on the state's debt capacity and recommends budget management policies.

    The Committee cautions that "debt capacity is a limited and scarce resource" but states that North Carolina's debt is considered manageable at current levels and better than most other states. The state's total outstanding tax-supported debt stands at $5.7 billion.

    The state debt, though large, is generally under control, and falling. The Committee has determined that General Fund debt is safely under guidelines for debt capacity, while General Fund net tax-supported debt has fallen 16% in the last four years.

    But the state's fiscal future is greatly dependent on the less transparent and more complex issue of unfunded liabilities.

    North Carolina has $35.6 billion in unfunded pension and promised health care obligations for state retirees. The Committee recommends continuing to add annually to the Unfunded Liability Solvency Reserve to combat this harmful growth.

    Ballooning unfunded liabilities for government retirees are a risk to the taxpayers who fund them. The government should cease its political gambit of overpromising retiree benefits it cannot afford. Unfunded liabilities hamper government's ability to provide future, essential services.

    The report also warns that transportation debt has increased substantially and will have reached full debt capacity by FY2026. North Carolina's Department of Transportation has historically exceeded its anticipated spending by significant amounts (12.5% in FY 2019).

    While the Committee recommends General Fund debt service payments be limited to 4% of revenues, it allows transportation debt service payments to grow to 6%, giving the fund greater flexibility to support higher debt levels. In the report, the Committee alludes to revisiting this guideline to transportation debt in the near future.

    Concurrent with these concerns, the General Assembly has honorably emphasized maintaining a hearty reserve fund. With the most recent budget, they dedicated more than $3 billion to the Rainy Day fund, making the state well positioned to address a potential downturn. The chart below shows this dedication to savings and the growth in positive General Fund balance.

    With ambitious increases to the Rainy Day fund and decreasing state debt, North Carolina continues to maintain its AAA credit rating. The biggest threat to North Carolina's fiscal condition remains it sizeable and growing unfunded liabilities.


Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published)
Enter Your Comment ( no code or urls allowed, text only please )




ABC issues fines, moves forward in expanding the size of growlers John Locke Foundation Guest Editorial, Editorials, Op-Ed & Politics The Vital Importance of Work to Liberty


HbAD0

Latest Op-Ed & Politics

Barr had previously said he would jump off a bridge before supporting Trump
illegal alien "asylum seeker" migrants are a crime wave on both sides of the Atlantic
Decision is a win for election integrity. NC should do the same.
Biden regime intends to force public school compliance as well as colleges

HbAD1

prosecutors appeal acquittal of member of parliament in lower court for posting Bible verse
Biden abuses power to turn statute on its head; womens groups to sue
The Missouri Senate approved a constitutional amendment to ban non-U.S. citizens from voting and also ban ranked-choice voting.
Democrats prosecuting political opponets just like foreign dictrators do
populist / nationalist / sovereigntist right are kingmakers for new government
18 year old boy who thinks he is girl planned to shoot up elementary school in Maryland
Biden assault on democracy continues to build as he ramps up dictatorship
One would think that the former Attorney General would have known better

HbAD2

 
Back to Top