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Our perspective: Illinois’ state budget is nearly $13B higher today than it was 6 years ago

Back to School Inflation

Pritzker proposes to permanently repeal the 1% state grocery tax. That’s good. The ballooning size of the state budget, not so good.

By Hilary Gowins | Illinois Policy Institute

During his Feb. 21 budget address, Gov. J.B. Pritzker introduced a $52.7 billion state budget – up from his first $40 billion budget in 2019. From his address:

“One of my missions as governor is to make life easier for working families. … And even though inflation continues to cool off, folks are still feeling the squeeze every week at the grocery store. So, there’s one more thing we ought to do. For the good of our state’s working families, let’s permanently eliminate the grocery tax! It’s one more regressive tax we just don’t need. If it reduces inflation for families from 4% to 3%, even if it only puts a few hundred bucks back in families’ pockets, it’s the right thing to do.”

We like eliminating the 1% grocery tax, which is a huge burden up and down the income ladder and why few states do it. Proposing $800 million in new taxes on businesses seems … not great.

The state is spending more money than ever, and that makes us very nervous. Lawmakers need to show more restraint. With one-party control across the board, it’s unlikely that will happen this year. Here’s what else you should know about the budget address and Illinois’ economy:

Read more here.

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