ȱ
ŠŽœȱŠ—ȱ›˜™˜œŽȱŒ˜—˜–’ŒȱŽŒ˜ŸŽ›¢ȱ•Š—œȱ
˜‹Ž›ȱ Š¢ȱ’•Ž›ȱ
Ž—’˜›ȱ™ŽŒ’Š•’œȱ’—ȱ–Ž›’ŒŠ—ȱŠ’˜—Š•ȱ ˜ŸŽ›—–Ž—ȱ
Š—žŠ›¢ȱŗŜǰȱŘŖŖşȱ
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
ŝȬśŝŖŖȱ
   ǯŒ›œǯ˜Ÿȱ
ŚŖŗŗŘȱ
ȱŽ™˜›ȱ˜›ȱ˜—›Žœœ
Pr
epared for Members and Committees of Congress

ŠŽœȱŠ—ȱ›˜™˜œŽȱŒ˜—˜–’ŒȱŽŒ˜ŸŽ›¢ȱ•Š—œȱ
ȱ
ž––Š›¢ȱ
On November 15, 2008, President-elect Barack Obama announced during his weekly radio
address that the nation was facing “…the greatest economic challenge of our time” and that he
would work with Congress to design a two-year economic recovery plan with the goal of creating
2 million jobs “…rebuilding our crumbling roads, bridges, and schools.” As negotiations
progressed, national unemployment figures jumped to a fifteen-year high of 6.8% for November
2008 and continued to increase, reaching 7.2% for December 2008. In light of the poor economic
news, President-elect Obama increased his economic recovery plan’s job creation goal, first to 2.5
million jobs over two years and later to 3 million jobs. In mid-December, President-elect Obama
presented congressional Democrats a proposal to dedicate $675 billion to $775 billion over the
next two years to middle-class tax cuts, aid to state governments and investments in
infrastructure, health-care technology, and education. On January 15, 2009, House Democratic
leaders released their economic recovery proposal. It would dedicate $825 billion over the next
two years for tax cuts targeted to the middle class and business ($275 billion) and increased
spending on infrastructure, health-care, education and aid to state governments ($550 billion).
This report examines arguments presented by the National Conference of State Legislatures
(NCSL) and the National Governors Association (NGA) to include state fiscal assistance in an
economic recovery plan, several arguments to exclude state assistance from such a plan, and the
implications the proposals presented by NCSL and NGA might have for the economy. It also
examines issues related to the targeting of state fiscal assistance and arguments for and against
including infrastructure construction projects in an economic recovery plan, and presents key
provisions in proposed economic recovery plans that directly affect state and local governments.
.

˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ

ŠŽœȱŠ—ȱ›˜™˜œŽȱŒ˜—˜–’ŒȱŽŒ˜ŸŽ›¢ȱ•Š—œȱ
ȱ
˜—Ž—œȱ
NCSL’s Arguments for Including State Assistance in an Economic Recovery Plan ....................... 1
NGA’s Arguments for Including State Assistance in an Economic Recovery Plan......................... 3
Arguments Against Including State Assistance in an Economic Recovery Plan............................. 8
Other Issues of Possible Congressional Interest............................................................................ 10
House Democratic Leaders’ Economic Recovery Plan ................................................................. 12

Š‹•Žœȱ
Table 1. Projected State Budget Gaps, FY2009 .............................................................................. 6

˜—ŠŒœȱ
Author Contact Information .......................................................................................................... 13

˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ

ŠŽœȱŠ—ȱ›˜™˜œŽȱŒ˜—˜–’ŒȱŽŒ˜ŸŽ›¢ȱ•Š—œȱ
ȱ
n November 15, 2008, President-elect Barack Obama announced during his weekly radio
address that the nation was facing “…the greatest economic challenge of our time” and
O that he would work with Congress to design a two-year economic recovery plan with the
goal of creating 2 million jobs “…rebuilding our crumbling roads, bridges, and schools.” As
negotiations progressed, national unemployment figures jumped to a fifteen-year high of 6.8% for
November 2008 and continued to increase, reaching 7.2% for December 2008. In light of the poor
economic news, President-elect Obama increased his economic recovery plan’s job creation goal,
first to 2.5 million jobs over two years and later to 3 million jobs. In mid-December, President-
elect Obama presented congressional Democrats a proposal to dedicate $675 billion to $775
billion over the next two years to middle-class tax cuts, aid to state governments and investments
in infrastructure, health-care technology, and education. On January 15, 2009, House Democratic
leaders released their economic recovery proposal. It would dedicate $825 billion over the next
two years for tax cuts targeted to the middle class and business ($275 billion) and increased
spending on infrastructure, health-care, education and aid to state governments ($550 billion).
This report examines arguments presented by the National Conference of State Legislatures
(NCSL) and the National Governors Association (NGA) to include state fiscal assistance in an
economic recovery plan, several arguments to exclude state assistance from such a plan, and the
implications the proposals presented by NCSL and NGA might have for the economy. It also
examines issues related to the targeting of state fiscal assistance and arguments for and against
including infrastructure construction projects in an economic recovery plan, and presents key
provisions in proposed economic recovery plans that directly affect state and local governments.
Ȃœȱ›ž–Ž—œȱ˜›ȱ —Œ•ž’—ȱŠŽȱœœ’œŠ—ŒŽȱ’—ȱ
Š—ȱŒ˜—˜–’ŒȱŽŒ˜ŸŽ›¢ȱ•Š—ȱ
On November 12, 2008, State Representative Joe Hackney, President of the National Conference
of State Legislatures (NCSL), sent a letter to President-elect Obama on behalf of NCSL arguing
that the federal government should include fiscal assistance to state governments in his economic
recovery plan because “…49 of the 50 states have requirements to balance their budgets each
year” and that “…during uncertain economic times, the decisions that state legislatures and
governors make to keep their budgets balanced – cutting spending, raising taxes or both – can
have the pro-cyclical affect of deepening and prolonging any slump.”1 Representative Hackney
attached to the letter NCSL’s recommendations for the President-elect’s economic recovery plan:
• a temporary increase in the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) to
assist people who lose health care coverage during the economic downturn and


1 Representative Joe Hackney, President of the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL), “Letter to The
Honorable Barack Obama concerning the Economic Stimulus Package,” November 12, 2008, http://www.ncsl.org/
print/statefed/Transition_Stim111308.pdf. Note: Vermont does not require a balanced state budget; balanced budget
requirements apply to state operating budgets only; and all states have a deficit for capital expenditures, primarily for
land, highways and public buildings.
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
ŗȱ
ȱ

ŠŽœȱŠ—ȱ›˜™˜œŽȱŒ˜—˜–’ŒȱŽŒ˜ŸŽ›¢ȱ•Š—œȱ
ȱ
complement support – an extension of unemployment benefits – provided in the
previously passed spending bill;2
• increased funding for broad, ready-to-go transportation, clean water and drinking
water projects to stimulate job creation;3
• a temporary extension of unemployment benefits to eligible individuals who have
exhausted their state benefits;4
• a temporary increase in food stamp benefits to assist the increasing number of
families struggling with rising food costs;5
• provide discretionary grants to state governments with the flexibility to address
fiscal concerns through one-time state grant assistance;6
• rescind the provision in the Deficit Reduction Act (P.L. 109-171) that prohibits
states from using incentive payments to draw down federal funds to assist states
with collections of child support payments and provide immediate assistance to
working families;7
• grant states that have complied with the Streamlined Sales and Use Tax
Agreement the authority to require collections of sales tax on remote sales and
provide equity for all retailers, providing as much as $30 billion in fiscal relief to
the states at no expense to the federal government;8 and
• pursue any federal personal and corporate tax relief through tax credits, such as
accelerating the scheduled increase in the child tax credit, and other changes in
federal tax liability, rather than through exclusions or deductions.9


2 For further program analysis see CRS Report RL32950, Medicaid: The Federal Medical Assistance Percentage
(FMAP)
, by April Grady; and CRS Report RS22849, Medicaid Financing, by April Grady.
3 For further program analysis see CRS Report R40053, Surface Transportation Program Reauthorization Issues for
the 111th Congress
, coordinated by John W. Fischer; CRS Report RL34675, Surface Transportation Reauthorization:
Selected Highway and Transit Issues in Brief
, by Robert S. Kirk; and CRS Report RL34171, Public Transit Program
Issues in Surface Transportation Reauthorization
, by William J. Mallett.
4 For further program analysis see CRS Report RL34340, Extending Unemployment Compensation Benefits During
Recessions
, by Julie M. Whittaker.
5 For further program analysis see CRS Report RL33829, Domestic Food Assistance: The Farm Bill and Other
Legislation in the 110th Congress
, by Joe Richardson.
6 For further program analysis see CRS Report RL31936, General Revenue Sharing: Background and Analysis, by
Steven Maguire.
7 For further program analysis see CRS Report RL34203, Child Support Enforcement Program Incentive Payments:
Background and Policy Issues
, by Carmen Solomon-Fears.
8 For further program analysis see CRS Report RL34211, State and Local Taxes and the Streamlined Sales and Use
Tax Agreement
, by Steven Maguire and CRS Report RL33261, Internet Taxation: Issues and Legislation, by Steven
Maguire and Nonna A. Noto.
9 NCSL, “NCSL Recommendations for an Economic Stimulus Package,” November 12, 2008, http://www.ncsl.org/
print/statefed/FiscalRecs111308.pdf. For further program analysis see CRS Report RL34715, The Child Tax Credit, by
Maxim Shvedov, and CRS Report RL32682, Children in Poverty: Profile, Trends, and Issues, by Vee Burke, Thomas
Gabe, and Gene Falk.
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
Řȱ
ȱ

ŠŽœȱŠ—ȱ›˜™˜œŽȱŒ˜—˜–’ŒȱŽŒ˜ŸŽ›¢ȱ•Š—œȱ
ȱ
On December 22, 2008, NCSL sent a letter to congressional leaders urging them to include state
assistance in an economic recovery plan, arguing that:
…As of today, states are facing a cumulative budget shortfall of nearly $100 billion, after
already closing a $53 billion gap. To make matters worse, state finances will continue to
deteriorate in the coming months, perhaps years. Because of state balanced budget
requirements, state lawmakers are being compelled to cut spending, increase revenues and
delay important infrastructure projects - actions that will prolong and deepen the effects of
the economic downturn. The state fiscal situation is so critical that it threatens the viability of
essential state programs and services, particularly those assisting vulnerable populations
most disadvantaged by the recession.”10
The letter included a list of recommendations for an economic recovery plan that was similar to
the list submitted to President-elect Obama earlier. Some of the differences included the addition
of public university facilities to the list of suggested infrastructure projects, a request for a
temporary waiver of state matching requirements for infrastructure projects to “…ensure that
these projects get started quickly,” and “ ... to temper the pressure that unfunded federal mandates
place on state budgets, the nation’s legislative leaders urge you to appropriate the promised 40
percent of costs for special education.”11
 Ȃœȱ›ž–Ž—œȱ˜›ȱ —Œ•ž’—ȱŠŽȱœœ’œŠ—ŒŽȱ’—ȱ
Š—ȱŒ˜—˜–’ŒȱŽŒ˜ŸŽ›¢ȱ•Š—ȱ
On October 27, 2008, NGA sent a letter to congressional leaders urging them to include state
fiscal assistance as part of any proposed economic stimulus package. The letter echoed NCSL’s
argument that state fiscal conditions were deteriorating and that state balanced budget
requirements would force states to either reduce spending, raise taxes, or both, actions that could
prolong the economic downturn and counter federal efforts to stimulate the economy.12 NGA
argued that “…one of the most effective sets of mechanisms the federal government can use to
speed recovery is investments in existing federal-state programs because these programs are on-
going and therefore the funds can be obligated quickly and expedited efficiently.”13 Specifically,
NGA recommended that Congress:
• temporarily enhance the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) for at
least two years because funding for FMAP is a particularly effective


10 National Conference of State Legislatures, “Letter to Senators Harry Reid and Mitch McConnell and Representatives
Nancy Pelosi and John Boehner concerning the Economic Stimulus Package, December 22, 2008,
http://www.ncsl.org/statefed/FederalStimulusLTR122208.htm.
11 Ibid. For further program analysis see CRS Report RL32085, Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA):
Current Funding Trends
, by Ann Lordeman.
12 Governors Edward G. Rendell and James H. Douglas, on behalf of the National Governors Association, “Letter to
Senators Harry Reid and Mitch McConnell and Representatives Nancy Pelosi and John Boehner concerning a proposed
Economic Recovery Package,” October 22, 2008,
http://www.nga.org/portal/site/nga/menuitem.cb6e7818b34088d18a278110501010a0/?vgnextoid=147053975ef2d110V
gnVCM1000001a01010aRCRD.
13 Ibid.
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
řȱ
ȱ

ŠŽœȱŠ—ȱ›˜™˜œŽȱŒ˜—˜–’ŒȱŽŒ˜ŸŽ›¢ȱ•Š—œȱ
ȱ
countercyclical tool that immediately allows Governors to eliminate planned
budget cuts required to meet balanced budget requirements and continue services
for those with the greatest need;
• invest in ready-to-go infrastructure projects that are a cost effective creator of
high paying jobs. These investments should include a broad array of
infrastructure projects including airports, highways, transit systems, clean water,
sewers and broadband; and
• change the tax code to spur economic growth and avoid policies that preempt
state authority, shift costs to states or impose new unfunded mandates.14
As negotiations on President-elect Obama’s economic recovery plan got underway, NGA issued a
more detailed proposal for economic recovery, entitled “Economic Recovery: A Federal State
Partnership.”15 The report, issued on November 13, 2008, reiterated NGA’s earlier argument that
“…one of the most efficient set of mechanisms the federal government can use to speed a
national recovery is investments in existing federal-state programs. These mechanisms are
effective because the programs are on-going and because state-by-state funding allocations,
administrative procedures and staffs already are in place to quickly distribute any additional
funds.”16 The report argued that the programs with the greatest potential to hasten the recovery
include:
• countercyclical programs where federal government funding can help prevent
proposed budget cuts that states would be forced to make because of their
balanced budget requirements;
• infrastructure investments that create jobs; and
• safety net programs that assist people in the greatest need (unemployment
insurance, Medicaid).17
Specifically, NGA recommended that an economic recovery plan include $126.1 billion for states:
$61.7 billion for three countercyclical programs, $57.4 billion for eight job creation programs,
and $7 billion for three targeted benefits programs.18
NGA recommended including the following three countercyclical programs in an economic
recovery plan: a temporary increase in the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) for at
least two years (costing an estimated $20 billion each year), extend authorization for transitional
medical assistance under Medicaid for low-income working families ($2.7 billion over 18
months), and commit to fully fund a glide path to 40% of the cost to educate students with
disabilities ($19 billion over two years).


14 Ibid.
15 National Governors Association, “Economic Recovery: A Federal-State Partnership,” November 13, 2008,
http://www.nga.org/Files/pdf/0811ECONOMICRECOVERY.PDF.
16 Ibid., p. 1.
17 Ibid.
18 Ibid.
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
Śȱ
ȱ

ŠŽœȱŠ—ȱ›˜™˜œŽȱŒ˜—˜–’ŒȱŽŒ˜ŸŽ›¢ȱ•Š—œȱ
ȱ
NGA recommended including the following eight job creation programs: $18.9 billion for
highway projects, with 68% spent in two years and temporarily eliminate the non-federal
matching requirement; $8 billion for mass transit projects, with 45% spent in two years and
temporarily eliminate the non-federal matching requirement; $9 billion to ensure the solvency of
the Highway Trust Fund, $1 billion for airport construction projects, with 61% spent in two years
and temporarily eliminate the non-federal matching requirement; $350 million to $500 million for
ready-to-go passenger rail projects and temporarily eliminate the non-federal matching
requirement; $9.2 billion for ready-to-go wastewater infrastructure projects and temporarily
eliminate the non-federal matching requirement; $6 billion for ready-to-go drinking water
infrastructure projects and temporarily eliminate the non-federal matching requirement; and $4.8
billion for affordable housing projects.
NGA also recommended including the following three targeted benefit programs: $3.5 billion for
Pell Grants, $2 billion for a 13-week benefit extension for unemployment compensation, and $1.5
billion to remove sequence-of-service requirements in the Workforce Investment Act of 1998
(repeal of Section 191(A)).19
On December 2, 2008, President-elect Obama met with 40 current and newly elected governors at
Philadelphia’s Independence Hall to discuss his economic recovery plan. Media reports indicated
that the governors requested $176 billion in state assistance at the meeting - $136 billion for
infrastructure projects and $40 billion for Medicaid.20
On December 15, 2008, NGA and the National Association of State Budget Officers released its
semi-annual report on state fiscal conditions, The Fiscal Survey of States. The report indicated
that in FY2008 most states’ fiscal conditions weakened and have continued to deteriorate;
nominal general fund expenditures and revenue collections increased for many states, but more
than half of the states experienced negative growth in general fund expenditures and revenue
collections after accounting for inflation; and fiscal conditions varied widely across states, as
some states (e.g., Alaska and Texas) prospered due to increases in commodity prices, while other
states were more exposed to the economic downturn.21 For FY2009, the report indicated that
enacted state budgets reflected a 0.1% decrease in state expenditures compared to a 5.3% increase
in FY2008 (the 31-year average is +6.3%). The report also noted that since state budget
enactments economic conditions in most states had deteriorated and, as of November 2008, 22
states had reduced state spending totaling $12.1 billion, and 31 states reported budget gaps totally
$29.7 billion. The report also indicated that “…states are forecasting declining economic growth
and expect to make significant budget cuts in the coming fiscal years.”22


19 Ibid., pp. 2, 3. For further program analysis see CRS Report RL31129, Higher Education Tax Credits and
Deduction: An Overview of the Benefits and Their Relationship to Traditional Student Aid
, by Linda Levine and
Charmaine Mercer; CRS Report RL31668, Federal Pell Grant Program of the Higher Education Act: Background and
Reauthorization
, by Charmaine Mercer; and CRS Report RL34251, Federal Programs Available to Unemployed
Workers
, by Julie M. Whittaker and Blake Alan Naughton.
20 Ceci Connolly, “States Want $176 Billion Slice of Stimulus,” Washington Post, December 2, 2008, D1.
21 National Governors Association and National Association of State Budget Officers, The Fiscal Survey of States
(Washington, DC: National Association of State Budget Officers, December 2008), p. 1,
http://www.nasbo.org/Publications/PDFs/Fall2008FiscalSurvey.pdf.
22 Ibid.
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
śȱ
ȱ

ŠŽœȱŠ—ȱ›˜™˜œŽȱŒ˜—˜–’ŒȱŽŒ˜ŸŽ›¢ȱ•Š—œȱ
ȱ
A NCSL study of state budget forecasts, released on December 4, 2008, reported similar findings.
It reported that 38 states faced projected budget gaps totaling more than $31 billion in FY2009
and $65 billion in FY2010. As shown on Table 1, NCSL reported that California had the largest
projected FY2009 budget gap ($8.4 billion, 8% of its General Fund Account), followed by Illinois
($2.3 billion), Florida ($2.142 billion), Georgia ($2.1 billion) and Pennsylvania ($2 billion). It
also reported that six states had projected FY2009 budget gaps equaling 10% or more of its
General Fund Account (Arizona, Georgia, New Hampshire, Nevada, Rhode Island, and South
Carolina ). Twelve states (Alaska, Arkansas, Indiana, Louisiana, Michigan, Missouri, Montana,
North Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas, West Virginia and Wyoming) did not have a projected budget
gap in FY2009.23 NCSL also reported that 15 states anticipated budget gaps of at least 10% of
their General Fund Account in FY2010, including Arizona (24.2%), New York (20%), California
(18%), Wisconsin (17.2%), Minnesota (14.7%) and Kansas (14.5%).24
Table 1. Projected State Budget Gaps, FY2009
Gap as a Percent of General
State
Projected Budget Gap
Fund Account
1. California
$8,400,000,000
8.0%
2. Illinois
2,300,000,000
7.7
3. Florida
2,142,000,000
8.6
4. Georgia
2,100,000,000
10.4
5. Pennsylvania
2,000,000,000
7.1
6. New York
1,475,000,000
2.6
7. Arizona
1,235,000,000
12.3
8. Massachusetts
1,200,000,000
4.3
9. North Carolina
1,200,000,000
5.0
10. Ohio
1,180,000,000
6.1
11. Virginia
973,600,000
5.7
12. Tennessee
800,000,000
7.0
13. South Carolina
724,400,000
10.0
14. Kentucky
456,100,000
5.1
15. Massachusetts
426,000,000
1.2
16. Washington
413,000,000
2.7
17. New Jersey
400,000,000
1.2
18. Connecticut
391,800,000
2.3
19. Utah
354,000,000
6.4


23 NCSL, State Budget Update: November 2008 (Washington, DC: NCSL, November 2008),
http://www.ncsl.org/summit/budgetmap.htm.
24 Ibid.
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
Ŝȱ
ȱ

ŠŽœȱŠ—ȱ›˜™˜œŽȱŒ˜—˜–’ŒȱŽŒ˜ŸŽ›¢ȱ•Š—œȱ
ȱ
Gap as a Percent of General
State
Projected Budget Gap
Fund Account
20. Rhode Island
350,000,000
10.4
21. Nevada
337,000,000
10.5
22. Michigan
281,000,000
2.0
23. New Mexico
253,000,000
4.2
24. New Hampshire
250,000,000
10.0
25. Hawaii
220,000,000
3.8
26. Oregon
142,000,000
1.0
27. Maine
140,300,000
4.5
28. Maryland
138,000,000
0.9
29. Kansas
136,800,000
2.1
30. Delaware
128,700,000
3.6
31. Alabama
123,500,000
6.0
32. Colorado
99,700,000
1.3
33. Vermont
88,000,000
8.0
34. Mississippi
85,500,000
1.7
35. Iowa
35,000,000
0.5
36. Idaho
27,000,000
1.0
37. South Dakota
7,000,000
0.6
38. Nebraska
5,300,000
0.2



Total
31,012,600,000

Source: NCSL, State Budget Update: November 2008 (Washington, DC: NCSL, November 2008),
http://www.ncsl.org/summit/budgetmap.htm.
Notes: Alaska, Arkansas, Indiana, Louisiana, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas,
West Virginia and Wyoming did not report a projected budget gap for FY2009.
On January 2, 2009, the five Democratic governors from New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts,
Ohio and Wisconsin held a joint press conference urging Congress to adopt a $1 trillion economic
stimulus package, with $350 billion for infrastructure, $250 billion for anti-poverty programs,
$250 billion in flexible education spending for programs from pre-kindergarten to higher
education, and $150 million for middle-class tax cuts.25 Referring to their proposal, New Jersey
Governor Jon S. Corzine reportedly said that “The scope of it needs to be substantial” and it
needs to “... include this education piece.”26 Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle reportedly argued
that without the added assistance for education, “We will see quality fall off in our schools. ... We


25 Robin Shulman, "Governors Call for $1 Trillion Stimulus to Offset Budget Cuts ," Washington Post, January 3,
2009, p. A2.
26 Ibid.
˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱŽœŽŠ›Œ‘ȱŽ›Ÿ’ŒŽȱ
ŝȱ
ȱ

ŠŽœȱŠ—ȱ›˜™˜œŽȱŒ˜—˜–’ŒȱŽŒ˜ŸŽ›¢ȱ•Š—œȱ
ȱ
will see a great restriction of university education, or such soaring tuition that ordinary, hard-
working families will be unable to afford it.”27 Ohio Governor Ted Strickland reportedly said that
“We aren’t crying wolf; these are real circumstances, unprecedented situations we are facing. ...
Looking forward, if I were simply to flat-fund the operations of this government, I would end up
with $7.3 billion in deficit. To get a balanced budget, I would have to fund current operations at
75 percent.”28
›ž–Ž—œȱŠ’—œȱ —Œ•ž’—ȱŠŽȱœœ’œŠ—ŒŽȱ’—ȱŠ—ȱ
Œ˜—˜–’ŒȱŽŒ˜ŸŽ›¢ȱ•Š—ȱ
Media reports indicated that during the governors’ December 2, 2008 meeting with President-
elect Obama in Philadelphia that Governor Mark Sanford (R-SC) opposed the President-elect’s
economic stimulus plan because “… we are just putting off the day of reckoning. A problem
created as a consequence of too much debt probably will not be solved by issuing more debt.”29
In a letter to the editor published in the Washington Post on September 26, 2008, Governor
Sanford opposed federal government intervention in the financial crisis:
An ever-expanding scope of federal commitment and power is not what made this country
great. Expanded power in one place comes at a cost in other places. American cornerstones
such as individual initiative and an entrepreneurial spirit—born in free and open societies
with private property rights and the rule of law—have never fit particularly well within the
context of an ever-growing federal government.30
He also called on taxpayers to “admonish those in Washington to get their own financial house in
order. Washington is the master of creative and unsustainable finance, with $50 trillion in
unfunded promises.”31
Although Governor Sanford’s arguments were presented in opposition to federal intervention in
the marketplace, they could be applied to the provision of federal assistance to state governments.
Those who advocate restraint in government intervention in the marketplace typically advocate
restraint by all levels of government, including state government. As a result, one possible
ideological objection to providing financial assistance to states in an economic recovery plan is
that, depending on how it is structured, it could increase the size and scope of state government.
According to this view, state governments have, by their own choice through their state
constitutions or by statute, designed their state policymaking process to force themselves to make
budgetary tradeoffs when state revenue fails to meet expectations. It could be argued that because
states purposively devised these systems to operate in this fashion, the federal government should
not interfere. Depending on one’s ideological viewpoint, what one views as a state fiscal crisis


27 Ibid.
28 Ibid.
29 Ceci Connolly, “States Want $176 Billion Slice of Stimulus,” Washington Post, December 2, 2008, D1.
30 Governor Mark Sanford, “A Bailout for All Our Bad Decisions?” Washington Post, September 26, 2008, A23.
31 Ibid.
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that needs to be fixed could be viewed by another as states adjusting to changed economic
circumstances and living within their means.
Another possible argument against providing fiscal assistance for states in an economic recovery
plan is that most states have accumulated “rainy day” funds for times of economic distress. The
NGA and the National Association of State Budget Officers’ study of state fiscal conditions
reported that states had $50.8 billion in total year-end balances at the end of FY2008, and $48
billion set aside for FY2009.32 It could be argued that these funds should be exhausted before any
federal assistance is provided to states. It could also be argued that states that failed to accumulate
enough in their rainy day funds to cope with the current economic downturn should suffer the
consequences of their actions. Others might argue that states could not have foreseen the extent of
the current economic downturn and its impact on state revenue. Also, the amount states have set
aside for FY2009 varies, with Alaska ($8.9 billion) and Texas ($12 billion), accounting for 43%
of the FY2009 total. Ten states (Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Kansas, Illinois, Massachusetts,
Michigan, Nevada, New Jersey, and Wisconsin) reported in November 2008 that they had
FY2009 budget balances below 2% of state expenditures and seven more (Arizona, California,
Hawaii, Kentucky, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island) reported balances below 3%.33
Another possible objection to the inclusion of financial assistance to state governments in an
economic recovery plan is that while many states are experiencing fiscal difficulty, so is the
federal government. It could be argued that with a debt now estimated at over $10.6 trillion the
federal government is not in a position to subsidize states. For example, Nick Ayers, the
Republican Governors Association’s Executive Director, reportedly advocates including state
assistance in an economic recovery plan but was quoted as saying that the five Democratic
governors’ recommendation to increase the plan’s cost to $1 trillion went too far, calling it
“essentially a bail out of these states’ general funds” and that “Now is the time to focus on finding
cost-effective ways to provide essential services without burdening future generations with ever
greater debt.”34 Also, House Minority Leader John Boehner reportedly met with President-elect
Obama on January 5, 2009 to discuss options for an economic recovery plan and expressed
concern “about wasteful spending that might be attached to tax relief. Simply put, we should not
bury future generations under mountains of debt.”35 Others might argue that, depending on how
the federal assistance was structured, that the federal government is not subsidizing states, but, as
NGA has argued, merely taking advantage of existing administrative arrangements to get
assistance to those found to both need and deserve assistance in an expeditious manner.


32 National Governors Association and National Association of State Budget Officers, The Fiscal Survey of States
(Washington, DC: National Association of State Budget Officers, December 2008), p. 24,
http://www.nasbo.org/Publications/PDFs/Fall2008FiscalSurvey.pdf.
33 Ibid., p. 66.
34 Robin Shulman, "Governors Call for $1 Trillion Stimulus to Offset Budget Cuts ," Washington Post, January 3,
2009, p. A2.
35 Paul Kane, Lori Montgomery and Shailagh, "Obama Pitches Stimulus Plan: GOP Asked to Help Design Bill; $300
Billion in Tax Cuts Sought," Washington Post, January 6, 2009, p. A1.
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ȱ
‘Ž›ȱ œœžŽœȱ˜ȱ˜œœ’‹•Žȱ˜—›Žœœ’˜—Š•ȱ —Ž›Žœȱ
Another issue of possible congressional interest relates to the manner in which federal assistance
might be allocated among states if Congress decided to include federal assistance to states in any
economic recovery plan. Should Congress target federal assistance to states that are anticipating
budgetary gaps in the next few years, or should it not concern itself with how federal resources
are allocated among states? If federal assistance is to be targeted to states with greatest need, what
criteria should be used to measure that need? For example, West Virginia, based on per capita
income, is a relatively poor state, yet it is not anticipating a state budget gap in the next two fiscal
years. California is a relatively rich state, yet it is anticipating budgetary shortfalls both this fiscal
year and next. Should California receive a proportionally greater share of federal assistance under
the economic recovery plan than West Virginia?
GAO has made several recommendations on federal-state allocation issues. During the last
recession, the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 (P.L. 108-27) provided
states $20 billion in temporary federal fiscal assistance, $10 billion in unrestricted federal
assistance and $10 billion in additional Medicaid payments. Congress asked GAO to study the
program’s impact on states. GAO reported that the funds were intended to provide antirecession
fiscal stimulus to the national economy and to help close state budget shortfalls due to the
recession that began in March 2001. GAO focused its analysis on the $10 billion in unrestricted
federal assistance and concluded that the unrestricted funds were not targeted to take into account
“…differences among states in the impact of the recession, fiscal capacity, and cost of
expenditure responsibilities. Rather, the funds were allocated to the states on a per capita basis,
adjusted to provide for minimum payment amounts to smaller states.”36 It argued that “…because
recessions affect states unevenly, targeting unrestricted funds to states most affected and with less
available resources could yield better results.”37 It recommended that in the future Congress use
change in state unemployment rates as a proxy for the recession’s impact on the state and change
in gross state product as a proxy for state fiscal capacity when allocating federal resources to
provide states fiscal relief during economic downturns.38
GAO also reported in its analysis of Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 that
providing states fiscal assistance during economic downturns raised the question of “moral
hazard.”
The potential availability of countercyclical federal funds could discourage state actions to
prepare for the fiscal pressures associated with a recession. States can prepare their finances
for fiscal stress and budget uncertainty, primarily through establishing budgetary reserves.
Budgetary reserves (sometimes referred to as budget stabilization funds or “rainy day”
funds) are available revenues set aside to provide a cushion that could be used in times of
fiscal stress.39


36 GAO, Federal Assistance: Temporary State Fiscal Relief, GAO-04-736R (Washington, DC: USGPO, May 7, 2004),
p. 2.
37 Ibid., p. 4.
38 Ibid., p. 6.
39 Ibid., p. 5.
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ŠŽœȱŠ—ȱ›˜™˜œŽȱŒ˜—˜–’ŒȱŽŒ˜ŸŽ›¢ȱ•Š—œȱ
ȱ
Another issue of possible congressional interest is the possible impact proposed state-run
infrastructure construction projects might have on the timing of an economic recovery plan’s
fiscal stimulus.40 GAO reported in its analysis of the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation
Act of 2003 that the first distribution of fiscal relief funds to states occurred about 19 months
after the end of the recession, limiting its effectiveness as a countercyclical program.41 Much of
the discussion concerning the role states might have in an economic recovery plan reportedly
involves their role in overseeing infrastructure construction projects. NGA’s recommendations,
for example, included eight job creation programs, all involving infrastructure construction
projects. One of the criticisms of infrastructure projects as a short-term means to stimulate
economic activity is the relatively long timeline associated with moving infrastructure projects
from planning to actual use. For example, the National Surface Transportation Policy and
Revenue Study Commission reported in December 2007 that:
Federal funds are currently distributed to State and local transportation agencies along with
many “procedural strings” that lead to excessive delays. Particularly for larger projects, the
complex process of planning, evaluating environmental impacts, and arranging project
funding can take as long as 15 years - an unacceptably long time in the face of immediate
and growing transportation problems and in contrast to the ever-shortening cycle of private
sector and entrepreneurial decision making.42
It could be argued that the need for an immediate economic stimulus suggests that an economic
recovery plan should focus on tax credits and other direct spending proposals that arguably could
provide for a more immediate fiscal stimulus than infrastructure spending. States counter this
argument by focusing on “ready-to-go” infrastructure projects. However, in recognition of the
time it takes to move even smaller infrastructure construction projects from planning to
construction, NGA’s job creation proposals included targets requiring the expenditure of federal
assistance within two years. For example, 68% of NGA’s proposed $18.9 billion for highway
projects, 45% of its proposed $8 billion for mass transit projects, and 61% of its proposed $1
billion for airport construction projects was to be spent within two years. Others might argue that
the nation’s economic difficulties are so extensive that including infrastructure spending in an
economic recovery plan is appropriate because even if its stimulative impact on the economy is
delayed it will reinforce the more immediate fiscal stimulus provided by other programs in the
plan. It could also be argued that the nation’s infrastructure needs are so profound that
infrastructure spending should be included in an economic recovery plan, even if that spending
has a delayed stimulative impact on the economy. For example, the National Surface
Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commission reported in December 2007 that the
transportation challenges facing the Nation “have reached crisis proportions,” with
“underinvestment in all modes of transportation ... that cannot meet the scale of future projected


40 For further program analysis see CRS Report R40107, The Role of Public Works Infrastructure in Economic
Stimulus
, coordinated by Claudia Copeland; and CRS Report R40080, Job Loss and Infrastructure Job Creation
During the Recession
, by Linda Levine
41 GAO, Federal Assistance: Temporary State Fiscal Relief, GAO-04-736R (Washington, DC: USGPO, May 7, 2004),
p. 2.
42 National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commission, Transportation for Tomorrow, Washington,
D.C.: National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commission, December 2007, Volume 1,
“Recommendations,” p. 4, http://www.transportationfortomorrow.org/final_report/.

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demand.”43 It recommended that funding for surface transportation programs be increased to at
least $225 billion annually from all sources for the next 50 years to upgrade the existing surface
transportation system to a “state of good repair.”44
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On January 15, 2009, House Democratic leaders released a summary of its proposed economic
recovery plan, to be called the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 when formally
introduced in the House. It would dedicate $825 billion over the next two years for individual and
business tax cuts ($275 billion) and increased spending on infrastructure, health-care, education,
and aid to state governments ($550 billion). The following list presents some of the key
provisions in the Democratic leadership’s economic recovery plan that directly assist state and
local governments. Summaries of other proposed economic recovery plans that include provisions
that directly assist state and local governments will be presented as they become available.
• $87 billion to increase the state Medicaid matching rate through the end of
FY2010, with additional funding based on state unemployment rates,
• $79 billion in state fiscal relief, including $39 billion to local school districts and
public colleges and universities, $15 billion to states as bonus grants for meeting
education performance measures, and $25 billion to states for other high priority
needs such as public safety and other services, including education,
• $13 billion in Title 1 education funding,
• $13 billion to increase the federal share of special education costs through the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act,
• $14 billion for a new School Modernization and Repair Program for K-12
education,
• $6 billion for higher education renovation and modernization projects,
• $1 billion for the Education Technology Program for computer and science labs
and teacher technology training,
• $2.5 billion for the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program,
• $2 billion for the Child Care and Development Block Grant program,
• $1 billion for the Community Development Block Grant program,
• $1 billion for the Community Services Block Grant program,


43 National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commission, Transportation for Tomorrow, Washington,
D.C.: National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commission, December 2007, Volume 1,
“Recommendations,” pp. 3, 4, http://www.transportationfortomorrow.org/final_report/.
44 Ibid., Volume 1, p. 1.
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ȱ
• $4 billion for state and local law enforcement, including $3 billion for the Byrne
Justice Assistance formula grants and $1 billion for the COPs hiring grant
program,
• $30 billion for highway and bridge construction and the waiver of state cost
matching requirements,
• $10 billion for transit and rail projects and the waiver of state cost matching
requirements,
• $3 billion for airport improvement grants,
• $6.9 billion for a new Local Government Energy Efficiency Block Grant,
• $4 billion for job training and employment services grants, and
• $19 billion for water, flood control and environmental restoration projects.45
ž‘˜›ȱ˜—ŠŒȱ —˜›–Š’˜—ȱ

Robert Jay Dilger

Senior Specialist in American National Government
rdilger@crs.loc.gov, 7-3110






45 Rep. David Obey, Chair, House Committee on Appropriations, “Summary: American Recovery and Reinvestment,”
Press Release, January 15, 2009, http://appropriations.house.gov/pdf/PressSummary01-15-09.pdf. Proposed bill text
available at http://appropriations.house.gov/pdf/RecoveryBill01-15-09.pdf.
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