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State tax receipts increase again in May

In a sign that hopefully indicates Kentucky’s economy is still on the road to recovery, the state budget office released a statement today showing tax receipts increased 17.8% in May over the previous year, marking the thirteenth consecutive monthly increase. State Budget Director Mary Lassiter acknowledged that  Kentucky’s business community has contributed significantly to the larger-than-projected revenues, primarily through individual and corporate income taxes and the coal severance tax.

Individual income tax receipts accounted for the majority of May’s increase, exceeding the previous year’s total by $94.1 million, largely due to business activity from pass-through entities. All of the large taxes are performing well during the economic recovery. We are now more confident that we will end the fiscal year ahead of budgeted levels; June’s receipts will determine by how much.

Among the major accounts:

In response to the May revenue report, Gov. Steve Beshear said that furloughs for state employees will not be on the table for FY 2012. However, as the Kentucky Chamber has stated in the past, the Commonwealth still has a lot of budgetary work left to do in order solve its half-a-billion dollar structural deficit and growing unfunded pension liability.

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