Note: This article was last updated in 2012. Click here for more recent information on state budgets and finances. |
California's lawmakers approved a FY2012 budget on June 28, 2011[1], that included $15 billion in spending cuts. Gov. Jerry Brown signed the budget into law on June 30, 2011.[2] Gov. Brown vetoed the first budget approved by the legislature on June 15, 2011.[3] Gov. Brown said on May 12, 2012 that the state faces an estimated $16 billion budget gap.[4]
Education Spending
For FY2012, California devoted 24.7% of its total spending to education, up from 25.6% in FY2009.[5]
Fiscal Year | Total Spending[6] | Education Spending[7] | Percent Education Spending |
---|---|---|---|
2009 | $427.0 billion | $105.5 billion | 24.7% |
2010 | $431.2 billion | $106.0 billion | 24.5% |
2011 | $422.1 billion | $106.0 billion | 25.1% |
2012 | $422.1 billion | $108.3 billion | 25.6% |
Medicaid
In FY2012, the state spent approximately $15 billion for Medicaid, known as Medi-Cal. Medicaid spending increased 50 percent over 10 years.[8]
Transfers of Funds
The state transfers money from funds intended for specific expenses in order to keep the state's day to day operations running. Gov. Brown signed a bill on Feb. 3, 2012 that expands the ability to borrow from dedicated funds, which will make $865 million available to help keep the state in the black through early March 2012.[9]
The legislature and the governor reduced the original $26.6 billion budget gap by $11.2 billion for FY2012, mostly through budget cuts.[10]
Federal Funds
California received $79.2 billion in federal federal funds over FY2012, which amounts to 38% of total state spending.[11]
Following the passage of the state budget, Standard and Poor's boosted California's credit outlook to stable from negative, and then on Feb. 14, 2012, it raised the outlook on the state's credit to positive.[12][13]
Some spending cuts in the budget include[14]:
Funding to K-12 education was not cut under the budget.[15]
Expenditures
The expenditures in the proposed budget included:[14]
Category | Amount | % of Budget |
---|---|---|
K-12 Education | $36.2 | 43% |
Health and Human Services | $21.2 | 25% |
Higher Education | $9.8 | 12% |
Corrections | $9.2 | 11% |
Legislative, Judicial and Executive | $2.5 | 3% |
Natural Resources | $2.1 | 2% |
General Government | $1.9 | 2% |
Business, Transportation and Housing | $0.69 | 0.8% |
State and Consumer Services | $0.60 | 0.7% |
Labor and Workforce Developments | $0.41 | 0.5% |
Environmental Protection | $0.06 | 0.1% |
Revenue
In addition to the tax increase proposal discussed above, the budget included revenues from a variety of sources:[14]
Source | Amount | % of Budget |
---|---|---|
Personal Income Tax | $49.7 | 56% |
Sales Tax | $24.1 | 27% |
Corporation Tax | $11 | 12% |
Insurance Tax | $2 | 2% |
Liquor Tax | $0.33 | 0.4% |
Motor Vehicle Fees | $0.19 | 0.2% |
Tobacco Tax | $0.09 | 0.1% |
Other | $2.4 | 3% |
<ref>
tag; no text was provided for refs named plan
<ref>
tag; no text was provided for refs named dice
State of California Sacramento (capital) | |
---|---|
Elections |
What's on my ballot? | Elections in 2024 | How to vote | How to run for office | Ballot measures |
Government |
Who represents me? | U.S. President | U.S. Congress | Federal courts | State executives | State legislature | State and local courts | Counties | Cities | School districts | Public policy |