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January Revenues Tick Up, Still Behind State Budget Plan

A little more than halfway through the year, total tax collections for Indiana are about $40 million - or 0.5 percent - behind the state's budget plan.
Lauren Chapman/IPB News
A little more than halfway through the year, total tax collections for Indiana are about $40 million - or 0.5 percent - behind the state's budget plan.

Indiana tax revenues surged ahead of the state’s revised, more pessimistic expectations in January. Yet seven months into the current fiscal year, total collections are still below target for the state budget approved last year by lawmakers.

Analysts delivered a new, less promising fiscal outlook in mid-December. Based on those projections, January revenues swelled, boosted by positive collections of sales and individual income taxes.

Corporate income taxes failed to reach even the more pessimistic marks in January, but state fiscal analysts say that’s because of recent federal tax changes. The state reports about $50 million were shifted from corporate to individual income tax pools in January.

A little more than halfway through the year, total tax collections for Indiana are about $40 million – or 0.5 percent – behind the state’s budget plan.

Brandon Smith has covered the Statehouse for Indiana Public Broadcasting for more than a decade, spanning three governors and a dozen legislative sessions. He's also the host of Indiana Week in Review, a weekly political and policy discussion program seen and heard across the state.
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