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The State Budget: Revenues, Taxes, and Expenditures.

The State Budget: Revenues, Taxes, and Expenditures. I: Revenue Sources for the State: A: Federal Grants -federal money goes to state and local government (usually for specific projects.

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The State Budget: Revenues, Taxes, and Expenditures.

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  1. The State Budget: Revenues, Taxes, and Expenditures. I: Revenue Sources for the State: A: Federal Grants-federal money goes to state and local government (usually for specific projects. B: Intergovernmental Revenue:- money from one level of gov’t to another (federal-state, state-county or city) C: Municipal Bonds –loans issued by state and local gov’ts to build highways, libraries, parks, school, etc. Bonds are promissory notes from banks that dictate the taxpayers are responsible for paying back the debt.

  2. C: Municipal Bonds help cities build big projects. • 1. may raise taxes to pay back • 2.voters vote on bonds • D: Other sources of revenues: Fees, Fines, Licenses, Permits, Tolls, Lotteries. • Fines- Traffic tickets • Fees-Licenses, license tags • Permits- Driver’s, hunting, fishing etc • Tolls-driving on highways, ferries, bridges • Lotteries-gambling used for education

  3. II: Taxes: Biggest source of revenue. • A: State Income Tax: income of individuals and corporations. • Progressive-more income, higher percentage. • B:Sales Tax:-sale of goods • 1. easy to collect, dependable • Regressive-people pay same amount, puts more burden on low-socioeconomic status citizens. • C: Excise Taxes: tax on specific good or service (ex: cigarette tax) • D: Property Tax- biggest source of local money • E: Estate Tax- tax on estate of someone who died.

  4. III: Expenditures • A: Education –most expensive expenditure • 1. local taxes, esp. property taxes provide funding • 2. states set curricula, pay for teachers. • B: Public Safety –law enforcement and corrections system. • C: Highways and Roads, bridges. • D: Other- Gov’t buildings, hospitals, libraries, parks. • E: Welfare for low income citizens, health care for poor children ( insurance for low income children), Medicaid, and food stamps.

  5. IV: North Carolina’s fiscal year begins on July 1 and goes to June 30 of the following year. • Our budget is a two-year (biennial) budget. • Budget must balance. • Begins at the Governor’s office. Staff prepares estimates of revenues they expect state to take in, add up expenditures from state agencies. After governor proposes budget it then goes to the General Assembly

  6. General Assembly- studies and revises it. • Both NC Senate and NC House agree on final budget and then pass it. • Copy the box “Balancing the Budget” in to your notes. p. 411

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