Politics & Government

North Carolina earns 'D' grade for its fiscal health

A new analysis of North Carolina's finances found each state taxpayer would have to pay -$8,100 to erase the state's debt.

A new analysis of North Carolina’s financial statements has found the state is facing a $24.3 billion shortfall, according to Truth in Accounting. That burden equates to -$8,100 for every state taxpayer.

As North Carolina’s fiscal health deteriorates, elected officials continue to mislead the public by failing to disclose significant amounts of retirement debt on the state's balance sheet, despite new rules to increase financial transparency. This skewed data gives North Carolina’s residents and taxpayers a false impression of the state's overall fiscal health.

Truth in Accounting is a Chicago-based nonprofit think tank that analyzes the latest federal, state and municipal comprehensive annual financial reports. According to its report for 2017, North Carolina had $56 billion in bills and roughly $31.7 billion in available assets to pay those bills after capital and restricted assets were excluded. This results in a $24.3 billion shortfall and a -$8,100 Taxpayer Burdenâ„¢, which is each taxpayer's share of state bills after its available assets have been tapped. TIA's Taxpayer Burden indicator incorporates both assets and liabilities, not just pension debt.

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A key reason for North Carolina’s Taxpayer Burden is because of an accounting rule implemented two years ago that requires state and local governments to report all of their pension debt on the balance sheet. At the end of the 2017 fiscal year, the state's reported pension debt was $3.8 billion. Despite reporting all of its pension debt, the state continues to hide $32.8 of its retiree health care debt. However, a new accounting standard taking effect next fiscal year will require government entities to report this debt on the balance sheet.

The bottom line is that North Carolina would need $8,100 from each of its taxpayers to pay all of its bills, which is why it received a "D" grade for its fiscal health.

Find out what's happening in NoDa-Midwood-Belmontfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

You can read the full report here.

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