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“The Good Old Days”. Are Fading for Michigan’s Local Governments. The “New Normal”. for Michigan’s Local Governments. Presented by: Larry Merrill Michigan Townships Association Executive Director. Michigan Local Government Fiscal Conditions 2014 and going forward.
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“The Good Old Days” Are Fading for Michigan’s Local Governments
The “New Normal” for Michigan’s Local Governments
Presented by: Larry Merrill Michigan Townships Association Executive Director Michigan Local Government Fiscal Conditions 2014 and going forward
Post-War Twentieth Century The “Good Old Days”
Good Old Days • Unparalleled Prosperity • Michigan’s Per Capita Income: Top 5 • Detroit Fourth Largest City in United States • Manufacturing Jobs Galore • Population Growth • Robust Economy (for the most part) • Sales and Income Tax Revenue • Housing Starts • Income Tax Revenues • New Revenue Sharing Program 1971 • Recessions Infrequent, Short Duration
1950-1999 2000-and on For Local Government • Manufacturing Sector Growth • Property Tax Revenues • State Shared Revenues • Federal Revenue Sharing • Expanding Role of Local Government • Federal Categorical Grants • Dot.Com Bubble • Capital Gains Growth • Global Economy Emerges • Manufacturing Declines • Population Declines • State Revenues Plunge • Mild Recession 2001-2003 • Severe Financial Sector Recession 2008-2011
There is no “Michigan” Economy The governor’s Regional Prosperity Initiative We are a state divided: • Resources • Expectations • Traditions • Infrastructure
Why the economy is not self correcting: • Still heavily reliant on declining industries and products • Aging work force lacks skills for emerging jobs • Entrepreneurial spirit is lagging • Lackluster immigration • Poor attraction, retention of knowledge workers
The Data Tells the Story.. The Data Tells The Story…
Source: Bureau of Labor Market Information, Local Area Unemployment Statistics (LAUS)
Source: Bureau of Labor Market Information, Local Area Unemployment Statistics (LAUS)
Source: Bureau of Labor Market Information, Local Area Unemployment Statistics (LAUS)
Source: Bureau of Labor Market Information, Local Area Unemployment Statistics (LAUS)
Source: Bureau of Labor Market Information, Local Area Unemployment Statistics (LAUS)
Source: Bureau of Labor Market Information, Local Area Unemployment Statistics (LAUS)
Source: Bureau of Labor Market Information, Local Area Unemployment Statistics (LAUS)
Source: Bureau of Labor Market Information, Local Area Unemployment Statistics (LAUS)
Source: Bureau of Labor Market Information, Local Area Unemployment Statistics (LAUS)
Source: Bureau of Labor Market Information, Local Area Unemployment Statistics (LAUS)
Source: Citizens Research Council Source: Citizens Research Council
Unfunded Liabilities • 311 Local Governments Have OPEB Liability • Total Liability is $13.5 billion; • Funded at 6% • Net Unfunded Liability is $12.7 billion • City of Detroit’s OPEB is $4.9 billion (2009) 39% of total for all local governments • 47% are starting to prefund • Equates to 20% of all general fund revenues • Total Unfunded Pension Liabilities $3.1 billion (10% of general fund revenues) • Average Annual Benefit per Retiree $8,887 • Governmental Activities Total Debt approx $5 billion
Performance Measure Per State Capita Ranking • U.S. Bureau of the Census data, except where noted
Performance Measure Per State Capita Ranking
Performance Measure Per State Capita Ranking
Appropriate Indices of Fiscal Problems • Levels versus changes • Local government debt • Cash solvency (current assets divided by current liabilities) • Debt service divided by total revenue • Inflation-adjusted taxable value growth