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Illinois Policy Institute policy analyst Ravi Mishra sees just
one victim stemming from Chicago’s ballooning budget costs where
most of the revenues continue to go be funneled toward pensions
and debt already incurred.
“I believe if this issue is not resolved or it continues to grow
it's just going to add more taxes on top of what we already
have, which is only going to drive out more businesses,
something that the city has been struggling with over the past 5
or 6 years,” Mishra told The Center Square. “We've had 10 major
corporations or corporate headquarters move out of the city.
That's tax money that the city can't collect anymore and that's
jobs that can't, that don't go to Chicago residents.”
Since 2019, new data shows the city’s overall budget has grown
by nearly 40% as government spending jumped by nearly $9 billion
with at least 46% of that steered toward pensions and debt
service.
As core services improvements and financial stability have also
stagnated, Mishra said it’s not hard to picture what the city
could soon look like.
“I think what it says is that the city is not on a good
financial trajectory right now when so much of the net
appropriations are going towards things that don't improve the
city, don't improve its economy,” he said. “This could mean
insolvency, which could mean millions of people losing their
pension benefits. In the shorter run, it basically just means
that more funds are going to be eaten up by pension and debt,
which means less funds going towards things that people actually
care about and need.”
At 40%, Chicago spends more of its budget on pensions and debt
service than any other major city, including more than double
that of New York and Los Angeles. More recently, lawmakers
enacted legislation that could drop city police and municipal
pension plans from current 25% funded levels to just 18%.
Mishra said every Chicago resident could be left paying the
price.
Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson proposed a budget that included
multiple new tax hikes on businesses that could eat away at
economic growth and prosperity, and much of those costs are
going to be reflected on taxpayers' bills, Mishra said.
“We already have some of the highest taxes in the entire nation,
which makes it very hard for investment to come into the city,”
he said.
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