An analysis by The Pew Charitable Trusts finds that the fiscal health of large U.S. cities varied considerably in fiscal 2013, depending on their circumstances.
An analysis by The Pew Charitable Trusts finds that the fiscal health of large U.S. cities varied considerably in fiscal 2013, depending on their circumstances.
Though the U.S. economy improved for a fourth straight year in fiscal year 2013, many big cities faced constrained budgets because of weak property tax revenue growth and cuts in federal and state aid.
This brief focuses on the cities that anchor the nation’s largest metropolitan areas. The fiscal health of the cities varied considerably in fiscal 2013, depending on their circumstances. Still, a number of trends emerge concerning the cities’ revenue, spending, and reserves.
The analysis, based on audited city financial statements, continues work undertaken by The Pew Charitable Trusts' American cities project following the Great Recession, which ran from late 2007 through mid-2009. For this multiyear series, Pew has examined data in the financial statements of the central city in each of the nation’s 30 largest metro areas (as defined by the 2010 census). Though included in previous analyses, Cincinnati was excluded from the most recent look at revenue, spending, and reserves because city officials changed its fiscal year in 2013. That resulted in financial documents that covered only six months and made it impossible to compare financial information to previous years or to other cities included in the analysis.
A separate brief, “Issuance of New Money Bonds Remains Low in Large U.S. Cities,” looks at trends in city bond issuances through 2014.
Total revenue in 16 of the 29 cities improved in fiscal 2013, compared with 2012. Still, recovery proved uneven. Phoenix, Miami, and Houston bounced back more quickly, while Tampa, Florida; Riverside, California; and Detroit continued to struggle.
Thirteen of the cities recorded increases in property tax revenue over the previous year. Sixteen cities experienced year-over-year declines in property taxes in fiscal 2013, compared with 24 cities in 2012, and the losses on average were smaller. Still, many continued to deal with the effects of depressed property values long after the Great Recession’s end in July 2009. The cities that recorded drops in property tax collections did so in part because of the lag in assessment updates reflecting lower home values after the recession. (See Table 1.) The lag in property assessments also translated into slower improvement in property tax revenue once the real estate market started to climb again.
In fiscal 2013, state and federal aid, a critical revenue source for local governments, declined in 21 of the 29 cities. The reductions, at an average of 6 percent between fiscal 2012 and 2013, proved steeper than in any year since the Great Recession began. The cuts in state aid reflected the deterioration in states’ own revenue during the recession and the slower-than-usual recovery that followed. Cities, like states, must balance their budgets each year, so they have to offset revenue reductions from the state by some combination of cutting spending, increasing taxes and fees, dipping into reserves, selling assets, or borrowing short term.
On a more positive note, revenue from sales and personal income taxes rose in most cities in fiscal 2013 because of increases in consumer spending and slowly improving employment. Eighteen of the 20 cities with a sales tax saw year-over-year increases from fiscal 2012, representing the fourth straight year of sales tax growth, when looking at the average change, across these cities. Eight of the nine cities that collect local income taxes reported increases, representing the third straight year of income tax growth, on average, across these cities.
By fiscal 2013, operational spending still had not recovered to 2007 levels in a majority of the 29 cities. In fact, more than a third faced seven-year lows.
Confronting slow revenue growth, officials in cities across the country made strikingly different choices about where to reduce expenses. For example:
By fiscal 2013, operational spending still had not recovered to 2007 levels in a majority of the 29 cities. In fact, more than a third faced seven-year lows. Confronting slow revenue growth, officials in cities across the country made strikingly different choices about where to reduce expenses.
Reserves are important fiscal management tools for governments of all sizes. They afford policymakers a fiscal cushion to close budget gaps, temporarily maintain city services, and mitigate the impact of falling revenue collections. After many cities dipped into their savings in the years following the Great Recession, cities generally showed larger balances in fiscal 2013, suggesting that some took advantage of moderate post-recession growth to start rebuilding their financial cushions. (A New York state mandate prohibits New York City from carrying reserve balances, so it is not included in the reserves analysis. For more information, see the full methodology.)
To understand borrowing activity in large cities, Pew also analyzed inflation-adjusted calendar year data from the Thomson Reuters SDC Platinum database covering municipal bond issuances over the last three recessions and the recovery periods that followed. Because it is based on a different data source, this analysis includes Cincinnati and brings the total to 30 cities. Among the key findings:
For the full analysis on municipal issuances, please see “Issuance of New Money Bonds Remains Low in Large U.S. Cities.”
The following describes the methodological approach and terms used in The Pew Charitable Trusts’ issue brief “Fiscal Health of Large U.S. Cities Varied Long After Great Recession’s End.”
The analysis, based on audited city financial statements, continues work undertaken by Pew following the Great Recession, which ran from late 2007 through mid-2009. For this multiyear series, Pew has examined data in the financial statements of the central city in each of the nation’s 30 largest metro areas as defined by the 2010 census. Though included in previous analyses, Cincinnati was excluded from the most recent look at revenue, spending, and reserves because city officials changed its fiscal year in 2013. That resulted in financial documents that covered only six months and made it impossible to compare financial information to previous years or to other cities included in the analysis.3
A separate brief, “Issuance of New Money Bonds Remains Low in Large U.S. Cities,” looks at trends in city bond issuances through 2014 and uses a different set of data, so the methodology is different as well.
The primary data sources for this analysis are Comprehensive Annual Financial Reports (CAFRs) for fiscal 2007 through 2013. Pew researchers collected data from the statement of revenues and expenditures and the statistical section of each city’s CAFR for every year in the study period.4 This analysis considers all governmental revenue and expenditures and is not limited to those just from each city’s general fund.5Although each city is unique, Pew organized governmental revenue and expenditure line items into major groupings that are comparable across cities. A detailed description of these groupings is given in the revenue and expenditures sections of this document.
Controlling for the effects of inflation enables comparisons of how fiscal conditions have changed for cities over the period studied and in relation to each other. Dollars are adjusted for inflation using the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis’ National Income and Product Account estimate. The same gross domestic product deflator values were used for all 29 cities in the 2013 analysis, regardless of geographic location, though each was adjusted to accommodate the appropriate fiscal year calendar in a given city. This approach avoids overstating differences between cities based solely on imperfect inflation estimates.6
There are several differences inherent to the governments of the 29 cities that data adjustments cannot standardize, such as the services they provide, the ways they generate revenue, their governmental structures, and their relationships with surrounding local and state governments. Although we have standardized the data across cities to the greatest extent possible and have consulted with the cities and adjusted data where appropriate, readers should keep these differences in mind.
In a few cases, variations from the standard methodology were required because of data constraints. Philadelphia, St. Louis, and Seattle, for example, did not break out revenue categories consistent with the detail provided by the other cities. After consulting with these cities, researchers relied on data from the supplemental statistical section of the CAFR (for Seattle and St. Louis) and detailed, supplemental financial reports (for Philadelphia). The modifications result in minor differences between the values of the line items used in this research and the values reported in the CAFR’s statement of revenues and expenditures.7
The remittance of the city share of state-imposed taxes, specifically sales tax, utility tax, and communication service tax in Florida, is reported differently in city CAFRs, especially as it affects Miami and Tampa, Florida. In some instances, these taxes are reported as own-source revenue, though they are locally generated state revenue that the city receives from the state. Pew re-categorized and included this revenue as intergovernmental to ensure accurate cross-city comparisons.
Pew researchers identified a “peak” and “trough” revenue year for each city, using inflation-adjusted dollars. Peak years could occur at any point in the study period, while trough years were defined as the lowest revenue point between 2008 and 2013; this time frame specifically targets revenue declines generated by the Great Recession.8Next, Pew grouped cities based on 2013 revenue performance relative to each city’s prior peak to identify those experiencing a rebound—exceeding their previous revenue high points—and those still struggling to return to pre-downturn levels.
For each city, Pew examined the primary drivers of revenue loss between peak and trough years, calculated the total revenue decline, and analyzed the share of that total loss represented by each individual revenue source. Similarly, for rebounding cities, Pew identified the revenue streams that were most responsible for financial gains between a city’s trough year and the end of the study period, as well as between 2012 and 2013. This strategy allowed researchers to assess trends across cities in the types of losses that drove revenue declines and the gains that spurred rebounds.
Pew researchers normalized revenue data reported in city CAFRs to create comparable categories that allow for meaningful comparisons across cities. While some types of revenue are reported relatively consistently across cities, in other cases Pew combined CAFR line items to create similar revenue groupings across cities. The categories include:
Pew researchers also examined how cities responded to revenue decline and growth by looking at changes in operating spending, reserves, and the management of long-term obligations.11Applying the same approach as with city revenue, researchers grouped CAFR line items where appropriate to create comparable spending categories across the cities. The categories include:
Pew measured each city’s available general fund balance as a percentage of total general fund revenue to account for its capacity to fund operations in the face of large and/or sustained budget shortfalls. Pew’s assessment of reserves was limited to the available general fund balance (as opposed to assessing balances across total governmental funds) in an effort to create a standardized measure across the cities.13