Forecast March 2020
Subjects
Fiscal Policy & Taxes
State Revenue & Budget
Agency
Agency
Published
03/16/2020
Focus Colorado presents forecasts for the economy and state government revenue through FY 2019-20. Implications of the forecast for the state's General Fund budget and spending limit are described in the report's highlights and executive summary sections. The report is based on current law, legislation passed by the General Assembly affecting the forecast is described throughout the report.
View Full Report View Economic Outlook Presentation Consumer Price Index
Focus Colorado Sections:
An executive summary of the full economic and revenue forecast.
An overview of what the revenue forecast means for the General Fund budget, transfers to the State Education Fund, Senate Bill 09-228 transfers to capital construction and transportation, and tax policies available only when there is a certain level of growth in General Fund revenue.
Article X, Section 20 of the Colorado Constitution (TABOR) limits the annual state revenue the state may retain and either spend or save. This section presents the outlook for revenue subject to TABOR, the TABOR limit, and TABOR refunds. In addition, this section describes the mechanisms used to refund revenue in excess of the TABOR limit.
The General Fund is the state's operating budget fund. It receives 95 percent of its revenue from income and sales taxes. Major General Fund revenue forecasts include:
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income taxes;
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sales and use taxes; and
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cigarette, tobacco products, and liquor excise taxes.
Cash funds are separate from the state General Fund. Cash funds receive revenue from a specific fee or tax that are set aside to be used for a specific purpose. Major cash fund revenue forecasts include:
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gasoline taxes;
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vehicle registration fees;
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gaming taxes;
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hospital provider fees;
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severance taxes and federal mineral lease revenue; and
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unemployment insurance premiums, benefits, and the trust fund balance;
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marijuana tax revenue.
A summary and forecast of the health of the Colorado and national economy.
Summaries of the current economy in the following regions:
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Metro Denver: Broomfield, Boulder, Denver, Adams, Arapahoe, Douglas, and Jefferson counties.
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Northern: Weld and Larimer counties.
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Pueblo and Southern Mountains: Pueblo, Fremont, Custer, Huerfano, and Las Animas counties.
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Colorado Springs: El Paso County.
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San Luis Valley: Alamosa, Conejos, Costilla, Mineral, Rio Grande, and Saguache counties.
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Southwest Mountain Region: Archuleta, Dolores, La Plata, Montezuma, and San Juan counties.
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Western: Delta, Garfield, Gunnison, Hinsdale, Mesa, Moffat, Montrose, Ouray, Rio Blanco, and San Miguel counties.
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Mountain: Chafee, Clear Creek, Eagle, Gilpin, Grand, Jackson, Lake, Park, Pitkin, Routt, Summit, and Teller counties.
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Eastern: Logan, Sedgwick, Phillips, Morgan, Washington, Yuma, Elbert, Lincoln, Kit Carson, Cheyenne, Crowley, Kiowa, Otero, Bent, Prowers, and Baca counties.
Historical economic data for the nation and Colorado.