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Connecticut’s State and Local Government Crisis: Fixing Our Future. Full Accrual=Long-Term Health. Modified Accrual=Short-Term Health. Either of the above are GAAP. Budget Basis can be anything! “Modified Cash” for the State. SHORT-TERM FINANCIAL HEALTH. Basis of Accounting.
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Connecticut’s State and Local Government Crisis:Fixing Our Future
Full Accrual=Long-Term Health Modified Accrual=Short-Term Health Either of the above are GAAP Budget Basis can be anything! “Modified Cash” for the State
Basis of Accounting • Government Funds – Modified Accrual • Measures flow of “current financial resources” • No long-term assets are added to equity • Capital Assets are expensed and not depreciated • Receivables not collected in 60 days are deferred • No long-term liabilities are subtracted • New debt is recorded as a revenue • Payments of principal and interest are expensed
Equity Compared to Others Source: National Association of State Budget Officers The Fiscal Survey of the States – Spring 2013
State of CT – LT Balance Sheet Summarized for discussion purposes from page 29 of 6/30/12 audited statements
Pension & OPEB Obligations • What is this? • Benefits we owe retired employees • Benefits that current employees have earned • OPEB - What is included in the liability? • Being “amortized” onto the books starting in 08 • On these 6/30/12 statements only 5/30th included • That means 25/30th are not included yet! • Most of this debt (83%) is NOT on the books yet!
Percent of Pension Funded CT is #48 of 50 in Funding our Pensions Source: The Pew Center on the States – 2012 report
Connecticut is one of 17 states that has not funded any of its OPEB Obligations Source: The Pew Center on the States – 2012 report
OPEB Costs per Year CT is #43 of 50 States in Cost per Year CT is #50 of 50 States in Cost per Year/Person Source: The Pew Center on the States
Source: Truth in Accounting’s “The 2012 Financial State of the States”
State of CT–LT Balance Sheet Liabilities are FIVE times the Assets
Spending Cap • Basic Rule: • Budgeted Expenditures Must Equal Est. Revenues • Expenditure Limitations: • % increase capped at higher of: • Annual growth in personal income • Annual inflation • Excludes: Debt Service, Certain Grants, Mandates • Any Surplus must: • Reduce Debt or Increase the Rainy Day Fund • Exception by Gov. and 3/5ths Gen’l Assembly • (This has normally occurred in surplus years)
Where have all the Surpluses Gone? Source: Connecticut’s Office of Fiscal Analysis
Basis of Accounting We Got We Wanted Not for Operating Audit Scope Limitation Fund the ARC
Our Recommendations for the State • Real “Rainy Day Funds” • Set a 10% to 15% threshold • No offsetting negatives! • Excess committed to pensions/OPEB Obligation • Strategic Planning including: • Long-term budgeting (5 to 10 years out) • Manage the Full Accrual Balance Sheet • It can no longer be business as usual
www.KeepingAmericaGreat.org Art Renner, CPA, Executive Director Connecticut Society of CPAs ArtR@CTCPAs.org Marcia Marien, CPA, Partner O’Connor Davies, LLP MMarien@ODPKF.com