Governor Hochul’s administration this week urged agency heads to keep their budgets flat next year. It’s the most serious acknowledgement yet of state government’s looming financial shortfall.

A number of factors—namely multiple years of significant spending increases—have New York facing a $10 billion mismatch between revenues and expenses in the fiscal year beginning next April. That’s the largest gap a governor has confronted since the Great Recession, and it comes before costs related to the state’s migrant crisis fully hit the balance sheet.

Holding state agency budgets at current levels, instead of allowing planned increases, is a good first step toward tackling the shortfall. But the move, if fully implemented, would shave just $1 billion—or one-tenth—from the forecast gap.

Agency spending is the third-largest area of state costs after Medicaid and school aid, programs that have swollen since 2020 and that now make up more than half of state spending. State Medicaid spending rose 13 percent this year alone, while school aid (adjusted for inflation) is about 25 percent above where it was a decade ago and is poised to rise more even as public school enrollment has collapsed. 

Hochul is under pressure from socialists and others to both hike taxes and invade the state’s newly developed cash reserves—moves that would erode the state’s tax base and leave it unprepared for an economic downturn. So far, the governor has indicated she wants to close the budget gap without doing either.

Tightening belts inside state agencies, on the other hand, will help Hochul credibly tell others to do the same.

You may also like

State Offers Taxpayer-Funded Health Coverage to Unionized Home Care Workers

In a new subsidy for the health-care union 1199 SEIU, the Hochul administration is allowing the union's benefit fund for home care aides to shift some members into taxpayer-funded health coverage through the Essential Plan. Read More

A Closer Look at $4 Billion in State Capital Grants to Health Providers

[Editor's note: This post was corrected after it came to light that records supplied by the Health Department gave wrong addresses for 44 grant recipients. The statistics and tables below were updated on July 18.] Read More

Hochul’s Pandemic Study Is a $4.3 Million Flop

The newly released study of New York's coronavirus pandemic response falls far short of what Governor Hochul promised – and the state urgently needs – in the aftermath of its worst natural disaster in modern history. Read More

82 Questions Hochul’s Pandemic Report Should Answer

This is the month when New Yorkers are due to finally receive an official report on the state's response to the Covid-19 pandemic, one of the deadliest disasters in state history. T Read More

How a Medicaid ‘Cut’ Could Lead to More Unionization of Home Care Aides

A money-saving maneuver in the newly enacted Medicaid budget could end up increasing costs in the long term – by paving the way for more unionization of the state's burgeoning home health workforce. Read More

Budget Deal Slows Medicaid Growth But Plants Seeds for Future Spending

The growth of New York's Medicaid spending is projected to slow but not stop as Governor Hochul and the Legislature effectively split their differences over health care in the newly enacted state budget. Read More

Albany’s New Health Insurance Tax Comes with Few Limits

The newly enacted state budget imposes a multibillion-dollar tax on health insurance without specifying who must pay how much – leaving those basic details to be decided later by the health commissioner in negotiation wit Read More

One of New York’s Biggest Medicaid Contractors Is Quietly Acquiring a Competitor

Author's note: This post has been updated to correct an error in the second paragraph. As state lawmakers debate the future of Medicaid home care, one of the program's bigg Read More