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The “Art” of Municipal Revenue Forecasting in Arizona Thursday, August 25, 2016 2:30PM –4:00 PM 1 Pat Walker, Pat Walker Consulting LLC Tom Duensing, Assistant City Manager, City of Glendale Presentation Objectives • • • • • • • 2 Introduction/Overview Overview of Budget Process What goes into revenue forecasting Municipal Revenues in Arizona Forecasting in Glendale, Arizona Summary Questions/Discussion Budget Process • Project out your revenues • Expenses-One time versus on-going • Fund balances Never Ending Cycle Preparation Audit Adoption Evaluation Implementation Preparation of Budget • Revenue Forecasting • Producing a “balanced budget” • Phantom deficit reductions that will catch up with you • Unrealistic revenue projections • One-time versus on-going • Ducking the decision Difference Between Large & Small Cities & Towns • Processes can be used by large or small communities • Small communities tend to get into line item but that can cause losing sight of the “big picture” • Same revenue sources, just at different levels Difference Between Large & Small Cities & Towns • Expenditure projection process-departments not as involved • Can become more political in smaller communities • Expenditures not of same magnitude but…..can be more than revenues base allows REVENUES Revenue Forecasting • Have to know how much you can spend without anything changing – baseline • Financial forecasting is one of the Finance Director’s most important tasks • Allows a proactive versus reactive response to potential imbalances • Long term plans & strategies 9 Revenue Forecasting • Private economy is never 100% so how can estimates be? • Financial management without trustworthy projections is not meaningful! • Dilemma is most cities & towns do not have economists and statisticians on staff 10 Revenue Forecasting Forecasts include and are driven by: Economic indicators – Consumer price index (CPI), unemployment rate, consumer confidence, job growth, etc. Demographic indicators – Population growth, how much and where Administrative – Current laws 11 Types of Revenue Forecasts • • • • • • 12 Extrapolation or Projection Deterministic Projections Multiple Regression Equations Econometric Equation Systems Microsimulation from Taxpayer files Judgmental and Subjective Most Widely Used Forecast Judgmental and Subjective! “Devastatingly accurate and immensely useful” 13 What goes into revenue forecasting? Best Practices Professional Judgement Economic Forecasts Historical Trends Policy Restrictions Revenue Estimate 14 Type of Revenue Forecast • Whatever type you use, it should be easy to understand, transparent and structured. • Forecast research has found “Statistically sophisticated or complex methods do not necessarily produce more accurate forecasts than simpler ones.”* 15 *Government Finance Review, “Revenue Forecasting,” October 2012. Forecast Policies • Two policies but Council must understand differences in policies Conservative – Under estimates revenues but if TOO conservative could lead to unnecessary fiscal stress, loss of opportunity costs or layoffs Objective – Project revenues as accurate as possible but understand risks. Could result in budget cuts/layoffs Must have contingency funds and strong financial policies 16 Revenue Forecasting Take Albert Einstein’s advice 17 Key to Revenue Forecasting • Must understand revenue source • Historical data must be clean – Incorrect posting of revenues – Law changes – Inconsistency • Revenue Fluctuations • Open and transparent process • No one methodology fits all revenues forecasted 18 Key to Revenue Forecasting • Good judgement and experience of forecaster • Too many cooks in the kitchen? • Revenues need to be monitored carefully and regularly against forecast – Compare against same time periods of prior years – Review reasons not consistent for the next revenue forecast 19 GFOA Best Practice Steps in Forecasting 1. Define the problem 2. Gather information 3. Conduct a preliminary/exploratory analysis 4. Select method(s) 5. Implement method (s) 20 CITY/TOWN ANYWHERE GENERAL FUND ANALYSIS 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18 2018-19 2019-20 2020-21 Estimated Projected Projected Projected Projected Projected REVENUES Revenues (1) Carryforward FB USED TOTAL REVENUES $ 1,355,296 1,552,638 1,578,460 1,604,795 1,608,859 1,609,724 - 260,281 - - - - 1,578,460 $ 1,604,795 $ 1,608,859 $ 1,609,724 1,661,598 1,693,083 1,725,984 1,759,544 1,661,598 $ 1,693,083 $ 1,725,984 $ 1,759,544 1,355,297 $ 1,812,919 $ EXPENDITURES Departmental Expenditures 1,525,133 Contingency Reserve (2) TOTAL EXPENDITURES $ NET REVENUES OVER/UNDER EXPENSES $ Beginning Fund Balance IF CONTINGENCY NOT SPENT FUND BALANCE IF CONTINGENCY SPENT Net Available/Deficit Contingency Reserve % $ 1,525,133 1,657,655 $ 155,264 1,812,919 $ (169,836) $ (105,017) $ (83,139) $ (88,288) $ (117,126) $ (149,820) 1,405,996 1,236,160 975,879 892,740 804,452 687,326 1,236,160 1,131,143 975,879 892,740 892,740 804,452 804,452 687,326 687,326 537,507 537,507 $ 9% $ 0% NOTES: 21 (1) Future year revenues were forecast at 1% increase per year, expenditures were forecast at 2% increase per year (2) Percentage of Revenues (Goal is at 11 to 15%) $ 0% $ 0% $ 0% Where the Money Comes from, Resources Fund Balance 16% Sales Tax 41% Other Revenue 18% State Shared Revenue 25% Sales Tax 22 State Shared Revenue Other Revenue Fund Balance Sales Taxes • Major Revenue Categories: Retail Construction Utilities Rental Restaurant/Bar Sales Tax Forecasting • Retail – Seasonality fluctuations – CPI – Consumer confidence – New or expanding businesses – Closing of businesses – Tax Law changes 24 Sales Tax Forecasting • Construction – Engineering news record for construction – western region – One time versus on-going – Housing market, prices go up, construction could go down – Know the projects in your community – Mortgage rates 25 Sales Tax Forecasting • Hotel/Motel & Restaurant & Bar: – Overall economy – Are you a tourist attraction? – Seasonal fluctuations – Hotels/Motels know # of rooms, rates, vacancy rates – New businesses/renovations/closures 26 Sales Tax Forecasting • Utilities – Proposed rate increases – Population increases – New homes/businesses – Weather – Most consistent sales tax source 27 Franchise Taxes Permission for utilities to use City/Town’s right away for underground lines Must be approved by vote of the people Usually based on % of gross sales Cannot exceed 25 years Property Taxes- Municipal • Primary tax rate can be used for any municipal purpose • Secondary rate can only be used for payment of debt service (principal and interest) on bonds approved by voters Property Taxes • • • • Property Classification Assessment Ratio Overlapping Rates Affected by Economy – Housing Market – Interest Rates State Shared Revenues State Sales tax Income tax Auto Lieu Highway User Revenue Income Taxes • Estimates are from 2 years ago collections • Influenced by economic activity • Complexity – Tax Exemptions – Tax Credits • Withholding rates 33 Enterprise Revenue Forecasting • Financial plan, versus rate study, versus cost of service studies • How much you need, how you are going to collect it and from whom you are going to collect it from • New housing/businesses • Type of business or manufacturing? • Weather 34 Other Revenues • • • • • 35 Building permits Fines and forfeitures Recreation and park fees Library fees Highway User (gas tax) Other Finance Sources • Bonds • • • • • • General Obligation Bonds Revenue Bonds Highway User Revenue Bonds Special Improvement District Bonds Municipal Property Corporation Bonds Water Infrastructure Financing Authority (WIFA) City of Glendale 37 Glendale - 2013 • • • • Short History Financial Forecast & It’s Purpose What goes into a forecast? Revenue Forecasts – Science vs. Art • Where are we at today? 38 Glendale – WSJ (Nov. 1, 2013) 39 Glendale – Az Republic (Apr. 11, 2014) 40 Goals - 2013 • Identify the Problem – Five-Year Financial Forecast • Fix the Problem – Communication – Transparency – Focus on the Future and Only Learn from the Past • Become “Financially Stable” Over a Five-Year Period • Protect Financial Stability – Financial Policies 41 Identify the Problem • Structural Deficit • Ongoing Revenues 42 Ongoing Expenditure Identify the Problem 43 Identify the Problem 44 Identify the Problem • Choices – Reduce Services/Absorb Revenue Reduction – Maintain Services/No Revenue Reduction – Combination of the Above 45 Messages in 2013 • Forecasting is a Journey…100,000 view – For Glendale, there is a 100% Guarantee the actual results in five years will be different than the forecast • Forecasting is the Cornerstone to Financial Planning/Stability • Decisions are applied to the forecast model first – Revenue/expenditure adjustments 46 Messages in 2013 • While Forecasting is a Journey, Revenue is the Engine to Get You There (i.e. revenues tell you how much you can spend) • Forecasting Revenue More of an Art than Forecasting Expenditures – Mostly Uncontrollable – Can be unpredictable – Dependent on Economy • Revenue is not Balancing Tool 47 Messages in 2013 • Tend to Lean Toward Conservative Revenue Estimates • Apply Technical Modeling – Econometric – Trends Analysis • Apply Professional Judgement 48 Glendale’s – Sources for Revenue Forecasting Framework • Recommended Budget Practices – A Framework for Improved State and Local Government Budgeting • GFOA Best Practices • Other City Budget/Forecast Documents 49 Best Practices Incorporated • Include Key Assumptions in Our Forecasting Model • “Projections should be available to participants in the budget process before budgetary decisions are made.” • Tried to be Accurate by Explicit About being Conservative • As Staff, Attempted to Understand Prior Forecasted and Actual Revenues (Historical Trends) 50 Best Practices Incorporated • Developed Revenue Policies – Fees & Charges (e.g. cover “costs” of services provided) – One-Time Revenue (Including Fund Balance) • Not Used for Recurring Expenditures • Explicitly Define Allowable Uses • Also Developed a Fund Balance Policy 51 Best Practices Incorporated • Unpredictable Revenue – Subject to Significant Variations (e.g. construction permits fees, construction sales tax) – Forecasted/budgeted cautiously • New Revenue – When is it appropriate to include in a budget/forecast? – We were not necessarily cautious • Document Revenue Sources – Annual Budget Document 52 Professional Judgement Used • Revenue is Situational – Attempted to Understand the Market • NHL Hockey & Westgate Entertainment District • Super Bowl XLIX – 2008 Results – Understand the Tax Structure (e.g. items over $5,000) – Policy considerations (e.g. property tax policy direction) – Is there a time to be more or less conservative estimating revenue? 53 Professional Judgement Used • Tracked History (Trend Analysis) • Go Back, Measure, & Explain Variations – Helps with future forecasting/budgeting – Glendale’s Sales Tax and State Shared Revenue data goes back to July 1, 2003 – Represents approximately 80% of total General Fund Revenue 54 Major Revenues • Sales Tax – Dependent upon: • • • • Local and state economies Retail sales Development activity Inflation – Growth assumptions (average increase 2.5% per year) • • • • • FY17 3.5% FY18 3.0% FY19 3.0% FY20 2.0% FY21 1.0% – Represents 50% of General Fund operating revenue ($102.1 million in FY17) – Based on historic trending taxable sales growth – Consistent with October 2015 Joint Legislative Budget Committee’s (JLBC) Financial Advisory Committee report Major Revenues con’t • State Shared – Average growth rate • • • • • FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 3.83% 4.0% 4.0% 3.67% 3.33% – Represents 29% of General Fund operating revenue ($60.1 million in FY17) – Base Year estimated from League – Forecast years consistent with projections from the Finance and Advisory Committee – Assumes no legislative changes – Adjusted for mid-decade census • Fees Major Revenues con’t – Growth assumptions by category or type • Examples – Community Development – Municipal Court – Recreation – Involves detailed analysis through other multiple departments – Dependent on activity levels and economy – Maybe impacted by statues, legislation and local mandates Financial Stability • What did we do since 2013? – Clearly Communicated Our Financial Condition & Projections – Try to Focus on the Future and Only Learn from the Past – Lifted the Sales Tax Sunset – Adjusted Fees 58 Financial Stability • What did we do since 2013? – Adjusted Budgeted Contingency – Bond Refunding (General Fund Supported) – Explicit Assumptions for Forecasting – New Arena Management Agreement • All financial decisions are applied to the forecast 59 Where are we at today? 60 Did it work? 61 Did it work? 62 Glendale’s Philosophy • Any Decisions Should be Applied to the Forecast Model • Revenue, Overall – Monitor, monitor, monitor – Understand what drives each revenue source – Understand the “why” of revenue deviations – Detail presented publicly • Communicate Clearly • Be Transparent 63 Summary • Which revenue forecast is implemented, conservative or objective? • Is the revenue forecast easily understandable and easily updated from year to year? • Is the forecast tailored to your community? • Is it a transparent process with input from inside and outside resources? 64 Questions? 65 Contact Information Pat Walker – [email protected] Tom Duensing – [email protected] 66