Page 14 - FY 2021--22 Revenue Outlook
P. 14

In addition to the receipt of federal funds, the budget assumes the widespread
                   availability of COVID vaccines will soon bring an end to the pandemic, with herd
                   immunity achieved by the end of July. Although parts of the country are currently
                   experiencing an uptick in infections and hospitalizations, and notwithstanding the
                   risk of a more virulent COVID variant, no additional closures are presumed.
                   Revenue estimates assume varying degrees of recovery in monthly receipts,
                   depending on the underlying economic drivers that would constrain or boost
                   growth. Additional details and assumptions are provided below, with forecast
                   estimates included in the General Fund Outlook Table and Assumptions in this
                   Section, and with monthly and prior-year data in Sections 2 and 3.

                   2021-22 Revised General Fund Revenue

                   Total revised General Fund revenue for 2020-21 is $7.02 billion, an increase of
                   5 percent ($336.6 million) above adopted revenue that includes the receipts from
                   one-time federal funding totaling $880.6 million. Without this funding, the City
                   would be confronted difficult decisions under a more austere budget. Excluding
                   federal relief funds, budgeted revenue is expected to end the year at
                   $6.14 billion, $544.0 million (-8.1 percent) short of adopted receipts.

                   Adopted General Fund revenue for 2020-21 was $6.69 billion, an estimated
                   increase of 1.8 percent  from 2019-20 adopted revenue,  but 4.9 percent above
                   actual receipts due to a $195.5 million year-end deficit. The deficit, attributed to
                   the first pandemic closures in 2019-20, created a substantial shock to travel,
                   business and home sales activities; halted City services; and prompted initial
                   relief measures for owed  taxes, fees and fines. The impact to 2019-20 final
                   quarter receipts foreshadowed the toll it would have on 2020-21 revenues.  At
                   the mid-year point of 2020-21, based on data through January 2021, the City
                   anticipated falling $600 million short of adopted receipts.  This estimate has
                   slightly improved to $544.0 million or  8.1 percent below adopted receipts. The
                   federal funds received to date and expected to arrive later this fiscal year have
                   fully addressed this revenue shortfall.

                   Representing approximately 70 percent of General Fund’s core revenue base are
                   seven major taxes: property, utility, business, sales, document transfer, and
                   transient occupancy and parking occupancy, all of which are vulnerable to
                   declines during an economic  downturn. Since 1990 actual receipts from these
                   sources have averaged 3.7 percent growth, yet, during the second year of the
                   Great Recession these combined receipts declined 4.8 percent. The $544.0
                   shortfall includes pandemic-related losses for the economy-sensitive revenues
                   totaling $280.6 million in the transient  occupancy, parking occupancy, sales,
                   property, business and utility users taxes (-$144.1 million, -$45.1 million, -$40.9
                   million, -$33.8 million, -$9.6 million, and -$7.1 million,  respectively). The net
                   decline in all seven taxes is -2.3 percent, nearer to the loss seen after the
                   1990-91 recession. While the drop in tourism, business closures and job loss









                                                              7
   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19