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Dateline: September 9, 2004
Texas' rainy day fund hits
$878 million
AUSTIN – Texas
Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn today transferred $594.5 million
into the state’s Rainy Day Fund, bringing the fund’s balance to $878.1
million.
“I am pleased to
report today that I transferred $594.5 million into the state’s Rainy
Day Fund,” Strayhorn said. “As I have said so many times before, the
money in the Rainy Day Fund should only be used for an emergency. I
still believe we should grow the Rainy Day Fund to at least $3 billion.
This would only be 5 percent of our state’s General Revenue budget,
which is what rating agencies recommend for fiscal soundness and a
minimum necessary if, God help us, we have a true emergency.
“I have always
said that conservative fiscal policies have served our state well in the
past and are the best bet for the future,” Strayhorn said.
Despite the raid
of the Rainy Day Fund during the last regular Legislative session,
Strayhorn said the unexpected surge in the natural gas severance tax has
begun to restore the fund. All three of New York’s top bond rating firms
gave their highest possible ratings to Texas’ 2004 Series Tax and
Revenue Anticipation Notes (TRANs).
The Rainy Day
Fund, also known as the Economic Stabilization Fund, was created by the
70th Legislature in 1987 as a savings account to help offset fiscal
instability in cases of a downturn in the economy. Dollars are
transferred into the fund in two ways – either by appropriations from
the Legislature, which has never occurred, or when oil and gas severance
taxes are above the benchmark year of 1987, 75 percent of those dollars
trigger into the fund.
It takes either a
two-thirds vote of the Legislature to make withdrawals from the Rainy
Day Fund, or a three-fifths vote if the Comptroller’s forecasts reduced
revenue before a session or if a deficit hits after a budget is
approved.
Strayhorn also
said economic news from her agency at the end of the fiscal year shows
that the Texas economy is fighting back and poised to make strides in
the near future.
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