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Dateline: November 8,
2001
State
economy recovering
AUSTIN – Texas
Comptroller Carole Keeton Rylander last week said the September 11
terrorist attacks reduced sales tax collections by a total $42 million, a
rebound from the initial $100 million-plus dip.
“The
state took an initial body blow of $113 million immediately after the
attacks, but we bounced back,” Rylander said. “Texans are a defiant,
confident, and resilient bunch. I continue to believe it is highly
unlikely that there will be a recession in Texas.”
Rylander
said consumer confidence, which was slipping before the September 11
tragedy, continued to slide nationally and in Texas; but the local slip
was not as steep. Between August and October nationally, consumer
confidence slid 25 percent; but during the same time in Texas, consumer
confidence slipped 21 percent.
The
Comptroller said she does not believe the September economic snapshot will
affect her biennial revenue estimate.
“One
month is not a trend,” she said. “I fully expect our economy to
recover in the latter months of next year.”
State
sales tax collections for September of this year totaled $1.15 billion,
down just one percent from the same time last year.
Texas
communities will learn the effects of the terrorist attacks on their local
revenue next week, when the Comptroller makes regular monthly sales tax
allocations on November 9.
Rylander
also said she will be transferring $686 million from the natural gas
severance tax into the state’s Rainy Day Fund, bringing that balance up
to $882 million.
Wall
Street cited the growing Rainy Day Fund in giving the state a high
financial rating. That, in turn, will save Texans $55 million this year.
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