The Center Square | October 14, 2019
Home / News / Money / Pew: Louisiana among seven states that receive more federal dollars than state tax revenue
Nearly one-third of the $1.97 trillion collected by state governments in fiscal year 2017 came from the federal government, the second-largest source of states’ revenue, according to an updated fiscal analysis of all 50 states by The Pew Charitable Trusts.
Federal dollars accounted for about $639 billion, the fourth-highest level in more than 50 years as a percentage of 50-state revenue, based on data going back to 1961, Pew reports.
The latest data shows that the U.S. government provided 32.4 percent of all the revenue collected by states in fiscal year 2017, down slightly from 32.6 percent in the previous year.
Federal funds accounted for the largest revenue source – more than state tax dollars – in seven states: Alaska, Arizona, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, New Mexico and Wyoming.
In fiscal 2017, five states received their highest share of revenue from federal funds on record: Montana (46.1 percent), Indiana (38.0), Arkansas (37.2), Pennsylvania (35.0), and Delaware (28.1). Only one state received its lowest share: Utah (24.2).
The analysis also shows the percentage of state revenue from federal funds was roughly twice as great in Montana (46.1 percent), Wyoming (44.5), Louisiana (43.7), Mississippi (43.3), and Arizona (43.1) – the states where federal shares were highest – than in Hawaii (20.7 percent), Virginia (21.1) and Kansas (23.3), the states where the shares were lowest.
Thirty-six states received a greater portion of their revenue from the federal government in 2017 than their 20-year average. Among them, Alaska had the largest increase of 14 percent, followed by Nevada (9.4 percent), Arizona (8.7 percent) and Indiana (8 percent).
Historically, the federal share of 50-state revenue has ranged from about one-quarter to one-third, Pew notes.
“The highest shares occurred just after the Great Recession, when a temporary influx of federal economic stimulus dollars and falling state tax revenue caused the federal share of states’ revenue to reach 35.5 percent in fiscal 2010 and 34.7 percent in fiscal 2011,” the report states. The third-highest share in fiscal 2016 was largely due to increased expenses in Medicaid grants to states, which account for about two-thirds of federal grants to states.
The analysis also highlights how the role of federal dollars in state finances has expanded. The fiscal 2017 share of 32.4 percent was 2.2 percent higher than the 20-year average of 30.2 percent since 1998, and more than 7 percent greater than the 25 percent average from 1978 to 1997, based on rounded data, the report notes.
Nationwide, states collected an additional $17 billion, or 2.8 percent more, in federal dollars than in 2016, reflecting a slowdown in funding of health care grants.
However, in fiscal 2017, 31 states that opted to expand Medicaid coverage had to pay five percent of the costs for the first time due to Affordable Care Act (ACA) guidelines. Under the Medicaid provisions in the ACA, the federal government reimbursed states 100 percent from January 2014 to December 2016 for all Medicaid expansion costs. By Jan. 1, 2020, states are responsible for 10 percent of those costs.
While federal dollars account for roughly one-third of state income, Pew notes that tax collections are states’ leading revenue generators. Tax collections reached $943 billion in fiscal 2017, or nearly half of state revenue.