Legislature(2017 - 2018)HOUSE FINANCE 519

02/10/2017 01:30 PM House FINANCE

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01:32:17 PM Start
01:34:09 PM Presentation: Forecasting Alaska's Economy: 2016-2017
02:23:25 PM Presentation: Alaska's Economy
03:48:26 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Forecasting AK's Economy: 2016-2017 by Jonathan TELECONFERENCED
King, MS, V.P. & Senior Economist, Northern
Economics
+ Presentation: AK's Economy by Dr. Ralph TELECONFERENCED
Townsend, Director, Institute of Social &
Economic Research (ISER), University of AK
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
                  HOUSE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                       
                     February 10, 2017                                                                                          
                         1:32 p.m.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:32:17 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CALL TO ORDER                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster called the House Finance Committee meeting                                                                      
to order at 1:32 p.m.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Neal Foster, Co-Chair                                                                                            
Representative Paul Seaton, Co-Chair                                                                                            
Representative Les Gara, Vice-Chair                                                                                             
Representative Jason Grenn                                                                                                      
Representative David Guttenberg                                                                                                 
Representative Scott Kawasaki                                                                                                   
Representative Dan Ortiz                                                                                                        
Representative Lance Pruitt                                                                                                     
Representative Cathy Tilton                                                                                                     
Representative Tammie Wilson                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative Steve Thompson                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
ALSO PRESENT                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Jonathan King, M.S, Vice President and Senior Economist,                                                                        
Northern Economics; Dr. Ralph Townsend, Director, Institute                                                                     
of Social and Economic Research, University of Alaska.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SUMMARY                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
PRESENTATION: FORECASTING ALASKA'S ECONOMY: 2016-2017                                                                           
     NORTHERN ECONOMICS                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
PRESENTATION: ALASKA'S ECONOMY                                                                                                  
     INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC RESEARCH                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster addressed the meeting agenda.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
^PRESENTATION: FORECASTING ALASKA'S ECONOMY: 2016-2017                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:34:09 PM                                                                                                                    
JONATHAN  KING, M.S,  VICE  PRESIDENT AND  SENIOR  ECONOMIST,                                                                   
NORTHERN  ECONOMICS,   provided  a  PowerPoint   presentation                                                                   
titled  "Forecasting Alaska's  Economy:  2017  - 2026"  dated                                                                   
February  10,  2017 (copy  on  file).  He believed  that  the                                                                   
state's  economy   was  in  recession.  He  noted   that  the                                                                   
presentation would  focus on how the recession  developed and                                                                   
where  the state  was heading.  He addressed  an overview  of                                                                   
the presentation on slide 2:                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Overview                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     We're in a Recession                                                                                                       
     We just completed  Phase 1 lead by the  oil industry and                                                                   
     allied sectors.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     The Timing of How We Got Here                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     Where We are Headed                                                                                                        
     What does Phase 2 look like?                                                                                               
     How  much does  the  State of  Alaska  and the  consumer                                                                   
     sector pull back?                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  King spoke  to predicting  recessions  in Alaska  (slide                                                                   
3):                                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     Predicting Recessions in Alaska                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     Layperson's  definition  is  two  quarters  of  negative                                                                   
     gross domestic or state product (GDP/GSP).                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     Gross State Product in Alaska is not a great measure:                                                                      
     The value of  all of the goods and services  produced in                                                                   
     AK…                                                                                                                        
     Largely tied to the value of oil exports…                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     Highly variable  from quarter-to-quarter because  of oil                                                                   
     production maintenance schedules….                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     Highly variable  from year-to-year because  of the price                                                                   
     of oil.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     If  we  used GSP  to  measure  recessions we'd  have  to                                                                   
     acknowledge that  we're entering our fifth  full year of                                                                   
     recession.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr. King  relayed that  gross state product  (GSP) was  not a                                                                   
great measure in Alaska.                                                                                                        
1:36:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  King  moved  to  slide 4,  titled:  "The  Value  of  Our                                                                   
Economy." He  relayed that the  value of the  state's economy                                                                   
had  peaked in  2012  at $50.6  billion,  combining both  the                                                                   
public and private  sectors, and had been in  decline for the                                                                   
past five years  (slide 4). He detailed that  the decline was                                                                   
due  to a  combination  of oil  production  declines and  oil                                                                   
price collapse.  He turned to  slide 5 and addressed  a chart                                                                   
"Looking  for  Consistent  Year-over-Year   Job  Losses."  He                                                                   
reported  that   sustained  multi-year  job  losses   was  an                                                                   
indicator  of recession  in the  state. He  pointed out  that                                                                   
for  most of  the  2000s the  state's  employment change  had                                                                   
been above  the gold line on  the chart (represented  at zero                                                                   
percent)  except for  a short  period  in 2009  to 2010  when                                                                   
unemployment  dropped sharply  (1 percent)  and quickly  rose                                                                   
back above  the gold  line due  to a  rebound in oil  prices.                                                                   
The economy had  started slowing down while  still growing in                                                                   
2011.  He highlighted  two  reasons for  the  slow down:  the                                                                   
federal sequester  removed a  lot of  money from the  Alaskan                                                                   
economy  and  slowing  investment  in the  oil  industry.  He                                                                   
summarized  that the Alaskan  economy began  slowing down  in                                                                   
2011 but did not stop growing until 2015.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:40:02 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. King spoke  to quarterly wages paid to  Alaskans on slide                                                                   
6.  The slide  included  a chart  titled  "Wage Growth  Trend                                                                   
Broken." He delineated  that the chart depicted  wage growth;                                                                   
each year the  high had been a  bit higher and the  low was a                                                                   
bit   higher  (the   fluctuations   were   due  to   seasonal                                                                   
employment)   indicating   a    growing   economy.   However,                                                                   
beginning  in 2015  the trend  was broken  and a  fundamental                                                                   
shift  in wages  being  earned in  the  economy occurred.  He                                                                   
turned to slide  7, titled "Household Confidence."  The chart                                                                   
reflected  the household  confidence  index  since 2010.  The                                                                   
gold  line  represented  the entire  index,  which  increased                                                                   
over time  and peaked  to above 60  [third quarter  of 2014].                                                                   
Subsequent to  a vote on SB  21 (Oil and Gas  Production Tax)                                                                   
[CHAPTER 10 SLA 13 - 05/21/2013] and the  general election in                                                                   
the  fourth quarter  of  2014, it  became  apparent that  oil                                                                   
prices  were  in  decline  and  the  household  and  consumer                                                                   
confidence began  to drop.  The dark bars  rising from  the x                                                                   
axis   for  each   quarter  year   represented   individuals'                                                                   
expectations   from  their  state   and  local  economy.   He                                                                   
elaborated  that expectations  had peaked  in 2014, but  then                                                                   
oil prices had  collapsed and expectations declined  to under                                                                   
30 points  in 2016.  He stated  that a  decline under  30 was                                                                   
very mathematically  difficult to "push" any lower.  He noted                                                                   
a  slight recovery  in the  expectation  levels. He  remarked                                                                   
that the country's  consumer confidence rose by  20 points in                                                                   
the last  quarter of 2016 and  wages increased in  the second                                                                   
half  of   2016.  The   "Trump  effect"  recently   increased                                                                   
consumer   confidence   due  to   a   switch   in  the   U.S.                                                                   
administration.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:43:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  King addressed  "High Earning  Sectors" on  slide 8.  He                                                                   
explained that  oil and  gas, construction, and  professional                                                                   
and  business  services  were  three  economic  sectors  that                                                                   
contained  highly  skilled, high  demand  jobs  for a  highly                                                                   
educated workforce.  The three  sectors were closely  aligned                                                                   
to oil  prices. He expounded  that the first  sector depicted                                                                   
on the graph  was the oil and  gas sector. He noted  that the                                                                   
area above  the red dotted line  on the chart  (zero percent)                                                                   
was  positive  and   below  was  negative.  There   had  been                                                                   
continued growth  and periods of record high  growth (2014 to                                                                   
2015)  in oil  and gas  employment,  but a  decline began  in                                                                   
2015  and dipped  well below  the  red dotted  line in  2016.                                                                   
There  were still  declines in  the oil and  gas sector,  but                                                                   
the line had  turned upward, meaning losses  were slowing but                                                                   
would not  stabilize until  the line rose  to the  red dotted                                                                   
line. He pointed  to a construction sector line  in gold. The                                                                   
construction  sector was  volatile and  seasonal. The  sector                                                                   
peaked  in  2014  due to  large  capital  budgets.  The  line                                                                   
declined in  2015 and  was closely aligned  with the  oil and                                                                   
gas sector. The  construction sector line rose  above the red                                                                   
dotted line in  the latter half of 2016 for  unknown reasons.                                                                   
He   pointed  to   the  professional   and  business   sector                                                                   
represented  by the purple  line on slide  8. The  sector was                                                                   
stagnant  since 2013.  He related  that  many businesses  had                                                                   
not  been adding  staff at  the  time because  they knew  the                                                                   
state's  spending was  unsustainable.  The sector  negatively                                                                   
declined  in mid-2015 and  losses continued.  The sector  was                                                                   
expected  to remain  in contraction  to an  unknown point  in                                                                   
time.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:47:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Gara  pointed to  slide 5 and  slide 8  related to                                                                   
year-over-year  statistics. He wondered  why the  graph lines                                                                   
were   so  jagged   over  time.   Mr.   King  clarified   the                                                                   
information was represented monthly year-over-year.                                                                             
Representative   Ortiz   spoke   to  the   construction   and                                                                   
manufacturing  sector that  had  jumped back  above the  zero                                                                   
line. He  wondered why. Mr. King  replied the reason  was not                                                                   
yet known  but noted the line  was a "U" shape under  the red                                                                   
dotted line  and had been  rising. He continued  that federal                                                                   
spending  had  increased  but  since  the  2017  presidential                                                                   
inauguration  came to a  halt. He  deduced that most  likely,                                                                   
the largest  outside driver  was the  stationing of  the F-35                                                                   
fighter  jet and  associated construction  that was  "helping                                                                   
to insulate" Fairbanks.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Gara surmised  that job numbers  would be  easier                                                                   
to follow. He  pointed to the construction numbers  and asked                                                                   
whether  the numbers  on  the graph  represented  percentages                                                                   
compared  to  the  year's  prior. Mr.  King  replied  in  the                                                                   
affirmative. He  stated that the  graph did not  depict total                                                                   
jobs in  the economy;  the data  was compared  to "12  points                                                                   
prior."  His   goal  was  to   show  the  evolution   of  the                                                                   
recession.  He referred  to a  recent article  in the  Alaska                                                                   
Dispatch  News (ADN)  that declared  9000 jobs  were lost  in                                                                   
the third  quarter. He contended  that the interpretation  of                                                                   
the  data  was  incorrect.  He   conveyed  that  the  correct                                                                   
interpretation  was  "compared to  the  3rd quarter  in  2015                                                                   
there were  9,000 fewer  jobs in the  Alaskan economy  in the                                                                   
3rd  quarter  of   2016."  His  graphs  were   "watching  the                                                                   
relative  health of the  sectors" versus  total job  numbers.                                                                   
He would  switch to the  total number  of jobs data  in later                                                                   
slides.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
1:51:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  King addressed  slide 9,  titled  "State Employment  and                                                                   
Retail."  He  noted  that  the  red  circle  on  the  graphic                                                                   
portrayed where  the high  earning sectors transitioned  into                                                                   
recession. He  explained that retail  had grown in  late 2015                                                                   
through 2016  and had begun to  decline in late 2016.  He had                                                                   
recently  spoken with  the head  of a major  retailer in  the                                                                   
state  who stated  that the  first  quarter of  2017 was  the                                                                   
first time in  160 quarters (16 years) that  the company lost                                                                   
money  in the state.  The retail  sector was  not a  "primary                                                                   
sector"  of the  economy and  did  not bring  money into  the                                                                   
state,  but it  signified what  people did  with their  money                                                                   
after earning  it from a sector  that brought money  into the                                                                   
economy.   Therefore,  the   retail   sector  represented   a                                                                   
secondary  effect  of  the economy.  He  reported  that  "the                                                                   
contagion was  starting to spread"  from the primary  sectors                                                                   
to  the secondary  sectors.  A  gray line  represented  state                                                                   
government as  well as a green  circle. The state  started to                                                                   
contract  right  after  Governor   Walker's  inauguration  in                                                                   
2014. The  contraction was  slower and  more measured  due to                                                                   
yearly  accounting  periods.  The line  depicted  that  state                                                                   
government  was losing jobs  at the  equivalent of  5 percent                                                                   
per year.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:54:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson  asked  for  clarification  about  the                                                                   
slide.   She  asked   whether   the  slide   depicted   state                                                                   
government  and   retail  jobs.  Mr.  King  replied   in  the                                                                   
affirmative.  He elucidated that  the graph represented  jobs                                                                   
not positions.  He emphasized  that Department  of Labor  and                                                                   
Workforce  Development  (DLWD)  statistics only  counted  the                                                                   
actual  number  of jobs.  The  count  was based  on  employed                                                                   
individuals as  measured through unemployment  insurance. The                                                                   
data represented "real people losing real jobs."                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  King  moved  to slide  10  titled  "Our  Biggest  Growth                                                                   
Sector."  He  noted  that  the red  dot  reflected  the  high                                                                   
earning  sectors,   the  green   was  retail  and   the  blue                                                                   
reflected  state  employment.   The  green  line  represented                                                                   
healthcare  which was the  one growth  sector in the  economy                                                                   
along  with  a  slight  increase   in  tourism  in  2016.  He                                                                   
reported  that tourism  was a  lower earning  sector and  not                                                                   
driven by  the state's  economy. He  offered that  healthcare                                                                   
was  the  largest  wage  and salary  sector  in  the  state's                                                                   
economy with  50 thousand employees.  He detailed  that other                                                                   
than  commercial fishing,  which was  not a  wage and  salary                                                                   
sector, healthcare  was the largest  employer in  the Alaskan                                                                   
economy.  Towards the  end  of 2016  the  line flattened  and                                                                   
"kicked  up"  to  the right,  indicative  of  the  governor's                                                                   
Medicaid expansion decision.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:57:11 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. King advanced to slide 11 titled "Where are we Headed?"                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Basic Things Determine Economic Robustness:                                                                                
          Money coming in….                                                                                                     
          Money going out….                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Rich economies bring money in and hold onto it.                                                                            
          Right now we're doing neither.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  King  noted  that the  state  had  difficulty  retaining                                                                   
money inside Alaska  because of the lack of  manufacturing in                                                                   
the state.  He elaborated  that when  a bush resident  bought                                                                   
something  in their community's  store,  $.80 cents of  every                                                                   
$1.00  spent immediately  left  the state's  economy. A  good                                                                   
multiplier  in  the   Lower  48  was  that   a  dollar  would                                                                   
circulate 2  to 2.5 times,  whereas in Alaska  the multiplier                                                                   
was $1.20;  higher in the urban  areas at $1.60 to  $1.70. He                                                                   
remarked  that the  state  "leaked money  like  a sieve."  He                                                                   
concluded that when  the state lost revenue from  oil, it was                                                                   
felt very quickly in the economy.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:59:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. King addressed the, "Three Legged Stool" on slide 12:                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Federal Government:                                                                                                        
          Education and Health Care                                                                                             
          Direct Employment                                                                                                     
          Constructions                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     Oil:                                                                                                                       
          Industry Direct Investment                                                                                            
          State Revenues                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     Everything Else:                                                                                                           
          Fishing                                                                                                               
          Tourism                                                                                                               
          Air Transport                                                                                                         
          Mining                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr. King turned to slide 13 titled "Budget Context."                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     FY2017 budget gap:$ 3.0 billion                                                                                            
     Approx. max sustainable flow from                                                                                          
     Permanent Fund (incl. ER, CBR):                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
          4.5% x $60 B = $ 2.7 billion                                                                                          
          $300 million                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     So the long run gap:                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
         $1000 PFD: $300 M + $700 M = $1.0 billion                                                                              
          $2000 PFD: $300 M + 1.4 B = $1.7 billion                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr. King  highlighted slide  14, titled "Dynamic  Forecasting                                                                   
with the Alaska REMI Model:"                                                                                                    
    Comparable to ISER's Man in the Artic Program (MAP)                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
          Dynamic model which forecasts policy changes over                                                                     
          time.                                                                                                                 
          Best in medium to long term applications (5 -50                                                                       
          years)                                                                                                                
          Model at the State and Regional (12) level                                                                            
          Used by Northern Economics for larger projects                                                                        
          with dynamic policy implications:                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
               Shell Offshore                                                                                                   
               "Big Gas Pipeline"                                                                                               
               Susitna Watana                                                                                                   
               Recession Policy Forecasting                                                                                     
               JBER Force Reduction                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Mr. King  explained the firm  had done some forecasting  with                                                                   
the  Alaska "REMI"  (Regional  Economic  Model, Inc.)  model.                                                                   
The model  was a  large mathematical  model that  represented                                                                   
all of the different  linkages of the sectors  in the Alaskan                                                                   
economy. The  model was also  linked to a demographic  cohort                                                                   
model that defined  the state by age, gender,  and ethnicity.                                                                   
The model enabled  his firm to enter different  scenarios and                                                                   
determine the  effect on the economy  over time; up  to fifty                                                                   
years.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:02:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. King moved  to "2015 Fiscal Policy Forecasting"  on slide                                                                   
15.  He elucidated  that the  slide depicted  a scenario  the                                                                   
firm ran  with the REMI model.  The "Y" axis  represented the                                                                   
Total Employment  Forecast that  included the  self-employed.                                                                   
He qualified that  when DLWD and the Institute  of Social and                                                                   
Economic  Research  (ISER) performed  employment  forecasting                                                                   
they only  considered wage  and salary  employment. He  noted                                                                   
that  the  total  number  of wage  and  salary  jobs  totaled                                                                   
approximately  365 thousand. The  number of self-employed  in                                                                   
the   state  was   100   thousand  that   included   doctors,                                                                   
fishermen,  carpenters,  sole  proprietors,  etc.  The  model                                                                   
projected  the  recession  to  continue  until  around  2020,                                                                   
losing  jobs from  a  high of  460 thousand  in  2015 to  the                                                                   
approximately  440  thousand job  level;  a loss  of  roughly                                                                   
15,000  to  18,000  jobs.  Subsequently,  the  economy  would                                                                   
improve. He  delineated that in  order for a job  increase an                                                                   
economic stimulus  was necessary in the form  of spending. In                                                                   
Alaska,  typically  the  increase   would  represent  federal                                                                   
spending or more  oil revenue. In the model,  the upswing was                                                                   
associated  with an assumption  that the  large gas  pipeline                                                                   
would begin construction  due to old forecasting.  He related                                                                   
that in actuality,  the Alaska economy had been  more durable                                                                   
than forecasted in  2015. The prediction for  2016 (blue bar)                                                                   
and actuals (gold bar) difference was less than 1 percent.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:05:46 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  King moved  to  slide 16  titled  "2017-2026 Budget  and                                                                   
Revenue Scenarios:"                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     Status Quo                                                                                                                 
     $4.2B Unrestricted General Fund; Spending from                                                                             
     reserves                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     Scenario 1                                                                                                                 
     $4.2B Unrestricted General Fund; Reduced dividend                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     Scenario 2                                                                                                                 
     $4.2B Unrestricted General Fund; Broad Based Tax                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     Scenario 3                                                                                                                 
     $3.2B Unrestricted General Fund; Full PFD; No Taxes;                                                                       
     Step down over 2 years                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
          Northern Economics does                                                                                               
          not advocate for any of                                                                                               
          these individual scenarios.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
          Our purpose is always to                                                                                              
          help society make better,                                                                                             
          more informed decisions.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr. King  reported that Northern  Economic prepared  the four                                                                   
models  for the  legislature as  "book ends."  He added  that                                                                   
the scenarios were  not in support of specific  policies, but                                                                   
as a  forecast of  the future  under different scenarios.  He                                                                   
spoke to  the status quo  and acknowledged that  the spending                                                                   
was  unsustainable   and  "endangered   the  corpus   of  the                                                                   
permanent fund" without a recovery.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Gara asked  if  he was  referring  to the  actual                                                                   
Permanent  Fund  Dividend  (PFD)  amount  from  the  previous                                                                   
year.  Mr.  King  clarified  that he  was  referring  to  the                                                                   
actual $1,000 PFD  that was paid to residents  and built into                                                                   
the model.  He addressed scenario  1 that spent  the reserves                                                                   
from the  reduced PFD  on government  services. He  mentioned                                                                   
that Scenario 3  included unrestricted general  funds of $3.2                                                                   
billion  UGF; full  PFD;  no taxes;  and  $500 million  "step                                                                   
down over two  years." He emphasized that he  was not present                                                                   
to recommend a scenario, but to provide options.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson   asked  about  the  PFD   amounts  in                                                                   
scenarios  1  and 2  on  the  slide.  Mr. King  answered  the                                                                   
status quo  would be the  normalized payout (a  $2,000 payout                                                                   
in 2016)  and a reduced  payout of  $1,000 under  scenario 1.                                                                   
Representative   Wilson  asked  about   the  PFD   amount  in                                                                   
scenario  2.  Mr.  King  answered  the  scenario  included  a                                                                   
substantially reduced dividend to below the $500 level.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:10:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. King underlined "Caveats and Assumptions" on slide 17.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     USEIA Oil Price Forecast                                                                                                   
          No strong recovery                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Nominal Dollars                                                                                                            
          Scenarios are in $2016                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     Additional assumptions                                                                                                     
          No major positive economic movers such as                                                                             
          pipelines or significant new oil production                                                                           
          Does not account for other potential black swans                                                                      
          (healthcare)                                                                                                          
          Small amounts of continued deficit spending.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     All Forecasts are Wrong                                                                                                    
          "Forecasts create the mirage that the future is                                                                       
          knowable"                                                                                                             
          -Peter Bernstein                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  King moved  to  slide 18  and  spoke to  "Comparison  to                                                                   
Other Forecasts"                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     What is a Job?                                                                                                             
          ISER and ADOLWD forecast wage and salary jobs                                                                         
          NEI uses wage and salary + self employed                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     Convergence                                                                                                                
          All three organizations predict similar losses                                                                        
          for 2017                                                                                                              
          ISER forecasts are equivalent to NEI's status quo                                                                     
          forecast                                                                                                              
     Divergence                                                                                                                 
          NEI scenarios adapt the status quo to reasonably                                                                      
          likely scenario                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  King moved  to slide  19,  titled "2017-2026  Employment                                                                   
Forecasts."  He indicated  that the graph  depicted that  all                                                                   
forecasts  were  the same  through  2017 because  the  policy                                                                   
remained the  same. The red  dotted line presumed  the status                                                                   
quo  and  showed  the  recession  in  2017  and  the  economy                                                                   
stabilize in subsequent  years. He explained that  the reason                                                                   
was the economy  had gone through the contraction  in the oil                                                                   
industry  and in  state  government and  government  spending                                                                   
would stabilize.  The economy went from a peak  employment of                                                                   
approximately  465 thousand  in  2015 to  under 445  thousand                                                                   
through  2026. He  noted  that "in  the  best case  scenario"                                                                   
15,000 to 20,000  jobs in the state's economy  would be lost.                                                                   
He  continued that  with  the next  two  scenarios, either  a                                                                   
broad based  tax or  significant reductions  in the  PFD, the                                                                   
employment projects  were essentially the same.  He qualified                                                                   
that  with  the   two  scenarios  there  was   a  significant                                                                   
"functional  difference on  the ground."  He delineated  that                                                                   
rural residents  or low  earners preferred  an income  tax to                                                                   
reductions  in   the  PFD,  conversely,  high   wage  earners                                                                   
preferred  reductions  in  the PFD.  However,  the  aggregate                                                                   
effect in the overall  economy was the same. He  spoke to the                                                                   
fourth  scenarios   effect  on   employment.  The   full  PFD                                                                   
dividend  coupled  with  budget   cuts  considerably  reduced                                                                   
overall employment  - instead of taking a bit  of income from                                                                   
everyone,  it  would  slice  a   portion  of  jobs  from  the                                                                   
economy.  The individuals  would  have  a hard  time  finding                                                                   
jobs  and   would  not   spend.  He   communicated  that   by                                                                   
eliminating 10 state  jobs, 6 to 7 private  sector jobs would                                                                   
also  be lost  due  to the  less  spending  generated by  the                                                                   
state employees.  He contributed  the data  to an ISER  study                                                                   
by Dr. Mouhcine  Guettabi, Assistant Professor  of Economics,                                                                   
ISER,  who concluded  that a  reduction  of state  employment                                                                   
was  "the  most  detrimental option  in  regards  to  overall                                                                   
employment"  due  to lost  dollars  spent by  the  unemployed                                                                   
state workers.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:15:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  King  discussed  "2017-2026   Population  Forecasts"  on                                                                   
slide 20. He  stated that without additional  expenditures in                                                                   
the  economy  (the status  quo)  the  model predicted  a  net                                                                   
negative  effect   on  population  beginning  in   2017.  The                                                                   
natural reproductive  rate may  slow as the economy  worsens.                                                                   
The  population   effects  took  longer  than   the  economic                                                                   
effects  for  the  other  three   scenarios.  He  reviewed  a                                                                   
summary of  his model conclusions  on slide 21,  titled "REMI                                                                   
Summary Results: 2017-2026:"                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
          Employment                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
          Employment bottoms out in 2018-2020.                                                                                  
               Sq: -13,000 jobs                                                                                                 
               S1: -25,000 jobs                                                                                                 
               S2: -24,000 jobs                                                                                                 
               S3: -33,000 jobs                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
          Without   additional    fuel   for   the   economy,                                                                   
          employment  does not  meaningfully recover  between                                                                   
          now and 2026.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
          Population                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
          Population loss from baseline in 2016:                                                                                
               Sq: -13,000 residents                                                                                            
               S1: -32,000 residents                                                                                            
               S2: -31,000 residents                                                                                            
               S3: -34,000 residents                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
          While  employment starts  to  recover around  2019,                                                                   
          population  declines  start  in 2017  and  continue                                                                   
          through 2026.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. King highlighted slide 22, titled "Key Takeaways 1:"                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     Mathematically, solving the "fiscal gap" is not a                                                                          
     challenge.                                                                                                                 
          The resources are there.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     Solving the "expectations gap" is an incredible                                                                            
     challenge.                                                                                                                 
          The hardest  myths to bust are those  we tell about                                                                   
          ourselves.                                                                                                            
          There  is no  such thing as  a universal  essential                                                                   
          service.                                                                                                              
          We  are in an  ideological struggle  over what  our                                                                   
          state should look like now.                                                                                           
          Our  progress  has  been  hampered  by  denial  and                                                                   
          uncertainty about the duration of our situation.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. King  believed that it  was difficult to  overcome things                                                                   
that  were  not  true  about   ourselves.  He  spoke  to  two                                                                   
generations in the  state that were not used  to paying taxes                                                                   
that he  viewed as a societal  stumbling block.  He concluded                                                                   
with slide 23, titled "Key Takeaways:"                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     Without stimulus or spending stabilization, we have 2-                                                                     
     3 years left in this recession.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
          The size  of second phase of the recession  will be                                                                   
          a  direct function  of oil prices  and the  battles                                                                   
          being wages in Juneau.                                                                                                
          Not   much   aggregate   difference   between   PFD                                                                   
          reduction  and a  broad-based  personal income  tax                                                                   
          because  both reduce income  for all or  nearly all                                                                   
          Alaskans.                                                                                                             
          The  $3.2   UGF  plan  has  the   greatest  overall                                                                   
          effects   because  it  involves   directly  cutting                                                                   
          18,000+/-State   supported   jobs   with   indirect                                                                   
          effects  accounting  for the  remaining 12,000+  in                                                                   
          losses.                                                                                                               
          People without  jobs are more likely  to sell homes                                                                   
          and  leave, whereas  reducing  everyone's income  a                                                                   
          little leaves a poorer, but economy more intact.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. King alerted  the committee that as a business  owner the                                                                   
prospect  of  no  economic  stimulus   or  stabilization  was                                                                   
"terrifying."  He could  not  hire more  people  or grow  his                                                                   
business    with   the   status    quo's   future    economic                                                                   
unpredictability.   He  believed   that  the   size  of   the                                                                   
recession  was   going  to  depend   on  the   decisions  the                                                                   
legislature  made. He  commented  that by  actually making  a                                                                   
decision   and   communicating   it  to   the   public,   the                                                                   
communication  was  as important  as  the decision  that  was                                                                   
made. He  thanked the committee  on behalf  of all 14  of the                                                                   
combined   efforts  of   dedicated   employees  at   Northern                                                                   
Economics.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:20:58 PM                                                                                                                    
AT EASE                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:23:20 PM                                                                                                                    
RECONVENED                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
^PRESENTATION: ALASKA'S ECONOMY                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:23:25 PM                                                                                                                    
DR.  RALPH  TOWNSEND,  DIRECTOR,   INSTITUTE  OF  SOCIAL  AND                                                                   
ECONOMIC RESEARCH  (ISER), UNIVERSITY  OF ALASKA,  provided a                                                                   
PowerPoint   presentation  titled   "Presentation  to   House                                                                   
Finance Committee"  dated February  10, 2017 (copy  on file).                                                                   
He  pointed to  the disclaimer  at  the bottom  of the  first                                                                   
page that read:                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     ISER  publications  and  presentations  are  solely  the                                                                   
     work of individual  authors and should be  attributed to                                                                   
     them, not to  ISER, the University of  Alaska Anchorage,                                                                   
     or the research sponsors.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend  mentioned  that the purpose  of the  disclaimer                                                                   
reflected public  educations "long  tradition" of  making the                                                                   
resources of  its faculty and  staff available to  the public                                                                   
independent   of  the  institution   itself."  Mr.   Townsend                                                                   
clarified  that ISER  attempted  to maintain  neutrality  and                                                                   
did not  advocate for specific  legislation. He spoke  to his                                                                   
short tenor in  Alaska, having moved to the  state the summer                                                                   
of 2016  and reported that he  lacked the vast  experience of                                                                   
living  in  the  state and  the  historical  perspective  and                                                                   
institutional knowledge of previous ISER directors.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
2:25:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend  moved  to  slide 2,  titled  "Managing  4  key                                                                   
Alaska Assets:"                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     1. Oil and gas resources                                                                                                   
    2. Financial assets (Permanent Fund, ER, CBR, etc.)                                                                         
     3. Physical infrastructure                                                                                                 
     4. Human capital                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend  discussed  that  the oil  resource  in  Alaska                                                                   
generated a very  unstable flow of revenue but  was typically                                                                   
not  problematic because  what  it generated  at its  minimum                                                                   
was  enough to  invest in  human capital  and then  determine                                                                   
how  to allocate  the  rest  to physical  infrastructure  and                                                                   
financial  assets.  He  mentioned  that  currently,  the  oil                                                                   
reserves  were  declining  in  its present  value  while  the                                                                   
state's financial  asset was increasing.  The state was  at a                                                                   
point  where  the  oil  revenue was  drying  up  and  created                                                                   
economic uncertainty.  Consequently, the state  had to manage                                                                   
both the financial  assets and oil resources  and both assets                                                                   
were  volatile.  The  problem  had  become  more  complicated                                                                   
because the  oil revenue was declining  and the state  had to                                                                   
manage the financial asset with its inherent variabilities.                                                                     
2:29:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend continued to slide 3: "Economic Context".                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     1. Moderate  recession began  late 2015 and  is forecast                                                                   
     to go into at least early 2018.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     2.  State  budget  decisions   will  affect  length  and                                                                   
     severity of recession.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend  elucidated  that  the  recession  was  a  "bit                                                                   
worse"  than predicted  and what  had become  more clear  was                                                                   
that  the  decisions   about  the  state  budget   needed  to                                                                   
consider what was going on in the broader economy.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend continued  to slide 4 titled: "Why  a multi-year                                                                   
plan:"                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     I. Both risk and opportunity                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     •Being forced  into a large  one or two  year adjustment                                                                   
     will seriously harm economy.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     •Change  is inevitable,  but  Alaska's  savings allow  a                                                                   
     multi-year adjustment.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend spoke  to slide 5, titled "Using  The ER Balance                                                                   
To Conceptualize Budgetary Risks:"                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     1.   Drawing  from   the   Earnings   Reserve  (ER)   is                                                                   
     essentially inevitable.                                                                                                    
     2. Will that draw be ad hocor planned?                                                                                     
     3.  What is the  risk that  the ER  draw, planned  or ad                                                                   
     hoc, will take the ER to/near zero?                                                                                        
     4.  What will  happen  if the  ER  balance goes  to/near                                                                   
     zero?                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend  believed  that  in  the  near  future  it  was                                                                   
inevitable  the  state would  need  to  draw funds  from  the                                                                   
Permanent  Fund Earnings  Reserve  Account  (ERA) to  balance                                                                   
the budget.  He questioned  the risks  and what would  happen                                                                   
if the  reserve balance came close  to zero. He  worried that                                                                   
there were a  number of strategies that ran  substantial risk                                                                   
of reducing  the ERA to zero  within 10 years. He  added that                                                                   
the  scenarios  involved  some  "bad luck"  but  that  proper                                                                   
planning  moved   the  possibility  towards   more  financial                                                                   
control of the  state's future by substantially  reducing the                                                                   
possibility  the earnings reserve  would get  to zero  in the                                                                   
future and  would reduce the size  and pain of  the necessary                                                                   
adjustments.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:35:09 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend moved to slide 6, titled "Hence, Planning":                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     •Planning  will  reduce the  probability  of getting  to                                                                   
     the point that the ER is exhausted.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     •Planning   will   reduce  the   size   (and  pain)   of                                                                   
     adjustments  if "bad luck"  gets us close  to exhausting                                                                   
     the ER.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend related  that private  business was  advocating                                                                   
for  a fiscal  plan and  understood  that budget  adjustments                                                                   
included  some  combination  of changes  to  state  spending,                                                                   
taxes,  or  the  PFD.  Variables  in  the  plan  will  affect                                                                   
different  businesses  differently   but  created  certainly.                                                                   
However, no plan was unpredictable and created instability.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend advanced  to  slide  titled "Why  a  multi-year                                                                   
plan?"                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     II.  Business impacts  are  inevitable and  will not  be                                                                   
     uniform.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
          •Both further spending cuts and additional                                                                            
          revenues seem unavoidable.                                                                                            
          •Different cuts and taxes will affect businesses                                                                      
          differently.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend   believed  most  businesses   understood  that                                                                   
business  impacts  were  inevitable.  He moved  to  slide  8,                                                                   
titled " Examples of Business Effects:"                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     •Sales tax: Impact from Internet competition.                                                                              
     •PFD cut: Impact on rural businesses                                                                                       
     •Higher  property  taxes from  education  cost shift  to                                                                   
     local  government:   Capital  investments   face  higher                                                                   
     taxes/lower returns                                                                                                        
     •No  capital budget:  Demand  for Professional  Services                                                                   
     much lower.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend  elaborated  that higher  property  taxes  were                                                                   
particularly bad  for companies that make large  fiscal plant                                                                   
investments, which  could be a "very substantial  part of its                                                                   
operating  costs."  He  summarized  that  budget  cuts  would                                                                   
affect different  businesses differently and  managers wanted                                                                   
to know what the future held.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:38:45 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend  moved  to  slide  9:  "A  Footnote  on  Budget                                                                   
Forecasts: Inflation."                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     Inflation needs to be treated identically in revenues                                                                      
     and expenditures.                                                                                                          
     •All can be in "nominal" terms, using the same                                                                             
     measures and expectations about inflation.                                                                                 
     •All can be in "real" terms, which is the same as                                                                          
     "today's dollars." Economists typically use real                                                                           
     calculations.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend stressed  that if some numbers  were nominal and                                                                   
others were  real it would  result in the wrong  calculation.                                                                   
He remarked that  real dollars was what a certain  amount was                                                                   
worth  in the  future,  i.e., what  $100  dollars buys  today                                                                   
versus  its  worth  in  20 years.  He  noted  that  had  seen                                                                   
calculations  of 6.9  percent  return on  the Permanent  Fund                                                                   
when predicting  PFD payout  and emphasized  that the  figure                                                                   
clearly included inflation  - it was beyond the  real rate of                                                                   
return  that could  be achieved  by a  fund the  size of  the                                                                   
Permanent Fund.  He warned that  certain data  predicted that                                                                   
state government  spending  would be flat  in nominal  terms,                                                                   
however  flat  nominal  spending   meant  2  percent  of  the                                                                   
services provided  would need to be cut due  to inflation. He                                                                   
cautioned  against the  situation of using  nominal terms  in                                                                   
budget calculations.  He illustrated  that 2 percent  over 10                                                                   
years  was  20  percent  and on  a  $4  billion  budget  that                                                                   
amounted to removing  $800 million from the  budget. He spoke                                                                   
about the  difficulties in  providing consistent  assumptions                                                                   
when calculating inflation in the Permanent Fund.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:42:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend moved to slide 10, titled "Tax Policy 101."                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     Broad and low.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend commented  that  economists overall  assessment                                                                   
of good  tax policy was "broad  and low." He defined  that it                                                                   
was better  to have an  income tax that  included all  of the                                                                   
income  at 2 percent  than to  institute an  income tax  that                                                                   
had  loopholes  for  50  percent  and  was  effectively  a  4                                                                   
percent  tax  rate.   Everyone  wanted  to  be   included  in                                                                   
loopholes and  the higher  the tax rate  the more it  paid to                                                                   
look for  the loopholes. Broad  and low meant the  tax system                                                                   
would not distort  the decisions that people  were making. He                                                                   
directed   attention   to   slide    11,   titled   "Economic                                                                   
Consequences of Taxes:"                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     1. Administrative and compliance costs                                                                                     
     2. People spend resources to reduce taxes                                                                                  
     3. People shift economic activity to less productive                                                                       
     uses to reduce taxes                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
          (2) and (3) are hidden, but often the real cost                                                                       
          of poor tax policy. Hence "broad and low."                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend cautioned  that the  higher the  tax rate,  the                                                                   
greater  the incentive  to  spend  money on  less  productive                                                                   
endeavors  that reduced  taxes. He added  that people  change                                                                   
what they  do to avoid taxes.  He exemplified the  strong tax                                                                   
preference  for  investments  in  housing.  Individuals  were                                                                   
able to  deduct property taxes  and interest and "for  a long                                                                   
time there  had been a  very favorable depreciation  schedule                                                                   
with respect  to residential  housing."  He deduced that  the                                                                   
favorable  policies  encouraged   investment  in  residential                                                                   
housing.  He emphasized  that  the decisions  people made  to                                                                   
avoid paying taxes  were more important to consider  than the                                                                   
administrative  costs of the  tax system.  He moved  to slide                                                                   
12, titled "Tax Policy 102:"                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Equity and efficiency are often in conflict in tax                                                                         
     policy.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:47:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend continued  that  the  things that  reduced  the                                                                   
broad  social costs  of  tax policy  often  resulted in  "the                                                                   
inequitable  distribution  of  the burden  of  taxation."  He                                                                   
spoke  to  a  tradeoff  between  equity  and  efficiency.  He                                                                   
advanced to slide 13: "Regressive vs. Progressive:"                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     •Regressive: percent of income paid in tax falls as                                                                        
     income increases. (Note that total tax paid may still                                                                      
     increase as income increases.)                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     •Progressive: percent of income paid in tax increases                                                                      
     as income increases.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend  explained that in  a regressive tax,  a percent                                                                   
of income  paid in tax falls  as income increases  (total tax                                                                   
paid may still  increase as income increases).  A progressive                                                                   
tax was a percent  of income paid in tax increases  as income                                                                   
increases. He  opined that  societal favoring of  progressive                                                                   
taxes was  a value judgement.  He added that not  many people                                                                   
were  in favor  of regressive  taxes, which  he believed  was                                                                   
unfortunate.  He noted the  term itself sounded  undesirable.                                                                   
He  believed people  went looking  for other  reasons not  to                                                                   
like  regressive taxes  (e.g.  administrative  costs -  which                                                                   
were  often very  small).  He  contended that  the  consensus                                                                   
that society  was "in favor of  progressive taxes was  not as                                                                   
broad as one would hear in the public discourse."                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Ortiz asked whether  there was any  consensus                                                                   
among  economists  about which  type  of  tax had  a  greater                                                                   
negative impact on the economy.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Seaton  noted  the  question  was  substantial  and                                                                   
would be answered after the presentation concluded.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend summarized  slide 14, titled "  Alaska's current                                                                   
taxes-I:"                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     •Corporate income tax: 9.4 % max. (Among 4 highest.)                                                                       
     •Local property taxes: 10-12 mils. (Slightly above                                                                         
     middle of pack.)                                                                                                           
     •No vehicle property tax. (Like 25 others.)                                                                                
     •Fuel tax $.08/gal. (Lowest.)                                                                                              
     •No personal income tax. (Like 6 other states; 2 tax                                                                       
     dividend and interest.)                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend voiced  that  Alaska was  unique  in that  some                                                                   
communities  lacked  property   taxes.  However  most  people                                                                   
lived  in communities  that did  collect  property taxes  and                                                                   
the  taxes  were  at  or  above  the  national  property  tax                                                                   
average.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:52:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend  addressed slide  15, titled " Alaska's  current                                                                   
taxes-II:"                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     •No state sales tax. (Like 4 other states.)                                                                                
     •No state lodging  tax. (All 4 states without  sales tax                                                                   
     have lodging tax.)                                                                                                         
     •10%  car rental  tax.  (Second  highest,  with 5  other                                                                   
     states.)                                                                                                                   
     •Local  sales taxes  to 7.5%.  Local rooms  tax to  12%.                                                                   
     (38 states have local sales taxes.)                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend  related that  the next  four slides  considered                                                                   
some "high level  considerations" of various taxes.  He moved                                                                   
to slide 16, titled "Sales Tax Effects"                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     •Moderately regressive                                                                                                     
     •Exemptions, esp.  food, reduce regressivity  at cost of                                                                   
     collecting less revenue.                                                                                                   
     •"Broad" for sales taxes means including services.                                                                         
     •Competition from Internet sales.                                                                                          
     •Federal income deductibility for itemizers.                                                                               
     •Estimated 10%-15% of purchases by tourists.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend  specified  that a substantial  amount of  taxes                                                                   
were paid  by tourists. However,  it was difficult  to obtain                                                                   
a good  estimate of  how much  of the sales  tax was  paid by                                                                   
non-residents versus tourists.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend  addressed  slide   17,  titled  "  Income  Tax                                                                   
Effects:"                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     •Rates can be progressive.                                                                                                 
     •Differential   treatment   of  different   income   and                                                                   
     expenses   can  be   quite   distortionary.  E.g.,   tax                                                                   
     preferences for housing.                                                                                                   
    •Impact on work decisions, esp. for second earners.                                                                         
     •Federal tax deduction for itemizers                                                                                       
     •About 15% of wages to non-residents.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend moved  to slide  18  titled "Coordinating  with                                                                   
Federal Tax:"                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     All state  income taxes rely  on aspects of  Federal tax                                                                   
     code.                                                                                                                      
          •Adjusted gross income with further adjustments                                                                       
          most common. Some also use federal deductions and                                                                     
          exemptions. Then apply own tax rates.                                                                                 
          •A    minority    use   Federal    income    before                                                                   
          adjustments.                                                                                                          
          •A few use their own income definitions.                                                                              
          •None define taxes as % of Federal liability                                                                          
Dr.  Townsend detailed  that  30 states  used adjusted  gross                                                                   
income  with further  adjustments; their  own deductions  and                                                                   
exemptions.  Another  7  states used  adjusted  gross  income                                                                   
with the  same federal deductions  and exemptions  or federal                                                                   
taxable   income.   Five   states  either   had   their   own                                                                   
definitions   or   readjusted    federal   income   in   more                                                                   
complicated  ways.  He voiced  that  "at present,  no  states                                                                   
defined  taxes using the  federal liability  as the  starting                                                                   
point."  He furthered  that as  of  1980 only  24 states  had                                                                   
income  taxes  and at  that  time  6  states did  employ  the                                                                   
federal tax liability.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:57:29 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend addressed  the  effects  of property  taxes  on                                                                   
slide 19:                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Property Tax Effects:                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
          •Arguments over progressive/regressive.                                                                               
          •Differentially affects those on fixed income.                                                                        
          •"Circuit breakers" reduce regressivity.                                                                              
          •Can create "tax competition" for industry.                                                                           
         •Federal tax deductibility for itemizers.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Representative Guttenberg  asked for a definition  of circuit                                                                   
breaker.  Dr.  Townsend  answered   that  "Circuit  Breakers"                                                                   
capped liability  at a percentage of income;  if property tax                                                                   
was more  than a specified percent  of income the  state paid                                                                   
the  difference.  He added  that  there were  variations;  in                                                                   
some cases  the community cannot  collect the tax  or offered                                                                   
provisions for  renters. Circuit  Breakers were "very  widely                                                                   
used" in the country.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend  addressed  slide 20,  titled  "Permanent  Fund                                                                   
Dividend cuts:"                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     •PFD is a very progressive program.                                                                                        
     •Therefore, cutting PFD has a strongly regressive                                                                          
     effect.                                                                                                                    
     •PFD cuts offset by federal income tax reductions.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend  remarked that  the only  similarity to  the PFD                                                                   
was  the  progressive  social  welfare  systems  of  northern                                                                   
Europe.  He noted  there  were  two ways  to  shift taxes  to                                                                   
other  payers: 1)  the federal  government paid  for part  by                                                                   
reducing  federal   income  taxes  or  2)   non-residents  or                                                                   
tourists pay it  directly. He offered that the  work ISER had                                                                   
done determined it  was hard to estimate the  amount of taxes                                                                   
paid  by non-residents.  The  institute  ascertained that  it                                                                   
did not  matter what  type of  taxes were  levied or  whether                                                                   
the  PFD was  cut,  approximately 15  percent  of the  change                                                                   
would be  paid either  by the  federal government in  reduced                                                                   
taxes or by  non-residents. He mentioned that  Alaskans would                                                                   
pay roughly  85 percent.  He noted that  it was difficult  to                                                                   
deduce who was really paying sales taxes.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:02:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend  briefly presented  slide 21, titled  "State and                                                                   
Local Spending:"                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     Long run goal is to fund services whose value to                                                                           
     Alaskans exceeds their cost.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend  stated that  it was not  possible to  ignore in                                                                   
the short-term  that laying  offs had  a negative effect.  He                                                                   
believed that  the long-run goal  was to assess the  value of                                                                   
the services provided.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Ortiz  asked  what  the  term  value  in  his                                                                   
statement  meant. Dr.  Townsend  believed  he meant  economic                                                                   
value.  For  example,  he  referred to  a  court  worker.  He                                                                   
pointed to  the economic value  of reducing a two  year court                                                                   
backlog to  two months. He maintained  that there was  a real                                                                   
economic  value to  having  a well-functioning  court  system                                                                   
that  reduced the  cost  of lawyers  and  societal costs.  He                                                                   
opined that value may be hard to measure, but it existed.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend  addressed  slide   22,  titled  "Spending  Cut                                                                   
Effects:"                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     •Impacts depend upon what you cut.                                                                                         
     •Details matter, such as impact on federal receipts.                                                                       
     •Education cuts will increase local taxes.                                                                                 
     •Other cuts (e.g., university) will shift costs.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend  commented  that  budget cuts  had  impacts  on                                                                   
Alaskans.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:06:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend  relayed he  was not  advocating for a  specific                                                                   
plan. He  addressed "Elements  of a  Multi-Year Fiscal  Plan"                                                                   
(slide 23):                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
   1. How Permanent Fund and related assets will be used.                                                                       
   2. How to manage volatility in net revenues from oil.                                                                        
   3. Multi-year expenditure plans, based on value to                                                                           
     Alaskans.                                                                                                                  
   4. Role/timing of additional taxes/costs to residents and                                                                    
     businesses.                                                                                                                
   5. How will savings be used to work through current                                                                          
     recession?                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend suggested  that the timing for the  taxes may be                                                                   
to phase them  in in. He emphasized that people  knowing what                                                                   
to expect relative to a tax plan was important.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:09:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
In  response to  a  question  by Representative  Wilson,  Mr.                                                                   
King  clarified that  she  was referring  to  year over  year                                                                   
employment  associated with  the fiscal  environment for  the                                                                   
oil  and gas  industry  and how  changes  in  the tax  credit                                                                   
program  would   affect  employment.  Representative   Wilson                                                                   
affirmed  and also  wanted him  to address  spending and  the                                                                   
"domino  effect  that happened  as  well." Mr.  King  replied                                                                   
that  the issue  was "incredibly  complicated." He  expounded                                                                   
that in  addition to  Alaska's tax  structure, oil  companies                                                                   
made  financial  decisions  on  an  international  basis.  He                                                                   
acknowledged that  in a broad  context, the credits  mattered                                                                   
to the oil industry.  In the case of Alaska's  interplay with                                                                   
the oil industry,  it was difficult to draw  firm conclusions                                                                   
or  consequences from  the decisions  the  industry made.  He                                                                   
related that  economists believed  that it was  "difficult to                                                                   
prove  the counterfactual"  or what  could have  been in  the                                                                   
absence of  oil tax credits. He  deemed that pulling  back on                                                                   
credits affected  the small  independent companies  that were                                                                   
much more  dependent on  them. The  longer-term question  was                                                                   
what the value  of the credits was and the net  present value                                                                   
of the  new oil  discovered because  of the  credits 5  to 10                                                                   
years in  the future. He added  that questions like  what was                                                                   
the value  of credits  if the  newly discovered  oil was  not                                                                   
near any infrastructure  to transport it to  market should be                                                                   
considered.   The   credits   were   meant   to   incentivize                                                                   
production and  not short-term employment. He  concluded that                                                                   
companies will  respond to changes  in the tax  credit system                                                                   
but how  and what  would be the  consequences were  difficult                                                                   
to determine.  In response  to a  question by  Representative                                                                   
Wilson,  Mr.  King answered  that  DLWD  reported  employment                                                                   
data  on  the  borough  level.   He  explained  that  it  was                                                                   
possible   to   find  employment   information   called   the                                                                   
Quarterly  Census  of  Employment   and  Wages  Data  or  the                                                                   
monthly  survey  data on  the  Fairbanks North  Star  Borough                                                                   
through  local  government  and  look at  employment  in  the                                                                   
individual sectors.  He stressed the importance  of analyzing                                                                   
the  data to  determine the  effect  of the  credits and  the                                                                   
broader  implications of  the state  of the  oil industry  at                                                                   
the  time. For  example,  if the  price  of  oil was  falling                                                                   
there may  be no immediate  layoffs and  the question  was to                                                                   
determine whether  no change in the employment  level was due                                                                   
to oil tax  credits. He reported that  sophisticated modeling                                                                   
was  necessary to  determine  the impact  of  tax credits  on                                                                   
industry wide variables.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:16:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Gara  addressed  Dr. Townsend  and  inquired  why                                                                   
states had  shifted away from  using a percentage  of federal                                                                   
income  tax. Dr.  Townsend responded  that one  consideration                                                                   
was certainly to  avoid any fluctuation in federal  tax rates                                                                   
impacting  the  amount  of  tax   the  state  collected.  For                                                                   
instance,  a 10  percent  decrease in  the  federal tax  rate                                                                   
resulted  in  a  10  percent   reduction  in  state  tax.  In                                                                   
addition, not relying  on a percentage of federal  income tax                                                                   
allowed  states  to  make  their  own  decisions  on  capital                                                                   
gains,  maintain  control over  what  they were  taxing,  and                                                                   
increased stability  (the federal government  often decreased                                                                   
taxes  during  a recession  -  the  opposite of  what  states                                                                   
typically needed.)  He indicated that ultimately,  it was not                                                                   
difficult  for a  state to  use  adjusted gross  income as  a                                                                   
basis  for its  income tax  rate.  However, he  spoke to  the                                                                   
ease of  a state  using a  percentage of  the federal  income                                                                   
tax  that  did   not  increase  the  "compliance   cost."  He                                                                   
delineated  that  many  reasons existed  for  separating  out                                                                   
deductions  and  exemptions.  He exemplified  that  the  most                                                                   
important  reason  was  that  20 percent  of  a  state's  tax                                                                   
payers resided  in the state  for part  of the year  and most                                                                   
states  wanted   control  of  allocating  their   income  and                                                                   
exemptions  in their  calculations. The  administration  of a                                                                   
state's  independent  tax  system   was  only  slightly  more                                                                   
complicated  than   a  percentage  of  federal   income  tax.                                                                   
However, it  was possible  to design a  state tax based  on a                                                                   
percentage  of  federal  income   tax  with  its  own  unique                                                                   
features, which was what most states attempted to do.                                                                           
3:20:56 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Gara  surmised that a  state would design  its own                                                                   
tax table that  mimicked a desired percentage  of the federal                                                                   
tax liability,  providing stability  versus basing  an income                                                                   
tax on  adjusted gross income  that fluctuated.  Dr. Townsend                                                                   
answered  that   presently,  most  states   coordinated  some                                                                   
aspects of their  tax system with the federal  system such as                                                                   
the  definition  of  income.  He  elucidated  that  regarding                                                                   
deductions  and  exemptions,  some  states  use  the  federal                                                                   
codes with the  caveat that the state retained  the authority                                                                   
to review changes  periodically and decided whether  to adopt                                                                   
or reject them.  He reminded the committee that  in the 1980s                                                                   
when  there had  last been  a state  income tax,  substantial                                                                   
credits  were  not  available  for  the  typical  tax  payer.                                                                   
Currently,  the  federal  tax  system had  many  credits  for                                                                   
things   like   higher   education  and   child   care   that                                                                   
substantially  reduced tax  liability.  If the  state used  a                                                                   
percentage of the  federal tax rates the state  had to absorb                                                                   
the credits.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Kawasaki related his  experience as  a member                                                                   
of a fiscal policy  committee in 2011 where ideas  on a state                                                                   
fiscal plan  was discussed  but not  adopted. He asked  about                                                                   
the quickest  ways to reverse  the recession without  harming                                                                   
the state.  Mr. King responded  that "the opportunity  to get                                                                   
out of  recession the fastest  had gone by" and  past several                                                                   
years earlier.  He thought  that the  emphasis going  forward                                                                   
was  to  decide what  kind  of  state  should emerge  in  the                                                                   
future  and  act  without  doing   substantial  harm  to  the                                                                   
economy. He  deduced that  since a  fiscal plan that  adopted                                                                   
an  annuity   type  approach  that  stabilized   spending  by                                                                   
employing the ERA  and "rolling in the CBR and  what was left                                                                   
of the  Statutory Budget  Reserve (SBR)"  past several  years                                                                   
earlier  the state  was  currently facing  stabilizing  state                                                                   
spending at  a much lower  level. He maintained  that another                                                                   
consequence was that  the state had to wait for  a rebound of                                                                   
oil  prices  and  could  not   invent  a  new  industry  that                                                                   
generated as  much revenue. He  spoke to Dr.  Townsend's idea                                                                   
of "broad and  low" taxes to introduce the  concept of paying                                                                   
for services while  attempting to determine the  services the                                                                   
state really needed  to provide, and to provide  the services                                                                   
well in  order for people to  have confidence in  their state                                                                   
government.  He  felt  that  the broad  cuts  over  the  past                                                                   
couple of  years did  not address  the question. He  provided                                                                   
examples  of ways  the cuts  had impacted  the Department  of                                                                   
Fish  and Game  that resulted  in  negative consequences.  He                                                                   
believed that  people needed to recognize  that opportunities                                                                   
were lost  and that the state  needed to adapt to  the future                                                                   
and think about the economy holistically.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:27:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend  surmised that if  the state attempted  to solve                                                                   
the fiscal  crisis in two years  the state would end  up with                                                                   
a four-year  recession,  which he  believed would  negatively                                                                   
impact   the  housing   market   and  add   further   drastic                                                                   
consequences.  He advocated  for  budget  adjustments over  a                                                                   
multi-year  time period. He  suggested delaying  implementing                                                                   
taxes  until 2019  and 2020.  He stressed  the importance  of                                                                   
stabilizing the  economy so  businesses had the  "confidence"                                                                   
to make  investment decisions  based on future  certainty. He                                                                   
restated the  importance of creating certainty  by specifying                                                                   
the fiscal  approach the  state would  take and  implementing                                                                   
the plan over several years.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Ortiz referred to  Dr. Townsend's  concept of                                                                   
broad and low  tax rates and cited the 9.4  percent corporate                                                                   
tax rate, one  of the four highest corporate  income taxes in                                                                   
the country.  He asked  whether the  corporate tax  was broad                                                                   
and included exemptions.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:31:16 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. King  replied that he  was an owner  of an S  corporation                                                                   
and he did not  pay corporate income taxes to  the state, due                                                                   
to the structure  of the tax system taxes could  "flow to his                                                                   
personal  income  taxes."  He   added  that  many  of  the  S                                                                   
corporations  and  LLCs  fell  under the  same  category.  He                                                                   
opined that he  was not opposed to a sales and  income tax in                                                                   
exchange  for services.  Many  in the  professional  business                                                                   
sector  were willing  to  pay taxes,  but  wanted the  burden                                                                   
spread fairly.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Seaton spoke  to the 9.4  percent corporate  income                                                                   
tax  relative to  the oil  companies. He  commented that  the                                                                   
tax was based  on worldwide apportionment and  companies paid                                                                   
an  average  of 4.4  percent  two  years  ago and  most  were                                                                   
paying  zero  at present.  He  observed  that the  amount  of                                                                   
Alaskan  corporate  taxes  paid  depended  on  the  worldwide                                                                   
profitability  of  the  oil companies  in  Alaska.  He  asked                                                                   
about trying  to implement a  tax in a reasonable  timeframe.                                                                   
He elaborated  that the committee  was considering  an income                                                                   
tax of 15 percent  of the federal tax rate.  He reasoned that                                                                   
developing   exemptions   and   deductions   decisions   were                                                                   
problematic  and   "almost  as  big  as  a   problem  and  as                                                                   
questioned as deciding on the tax itself."                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:34:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Townsend  answered that the  legislature could  adopt the                                                                   
federal  definitions  of  deductions  and  exemptions,  which                                                                   
many  states did.  He  detailed that  most  states had  small                                                                   
adjustments  for  taxes paid  on  state  or local  bonds  and                                                                   
treat income  earned in other  states slightly  different. He                                                                   
voiced that  designing a  tax so  that the legislature  could                                                                   
declare to  its citizens a tax  of 15 percent of  the federal                                                                   
income  tax  would   be  imposed  "was  a   straight  forward                                                                   
exercise."   He   related   the   importance   of   initially                                                                   
communicating  what the tax  would do  and then dealing  with                                                                   
administering the  tax going forward. He  suggested designing                                                                   
the tax  through the  tax brackets  and subsequently  dealing                                                                   
with  credits and  capital  gains and  other  details. A  tax                                                                   
based on  a percentage  of the federal  income tax  offered a                                                                   
structure  that dealt  more  easily with  the  20 percent  of                                                                   
part-year residents.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Seaton relayed  that he was referring to  all of the                                                                   
efforts  entities  take to  evade  taxes in  statute  through                                                                   
lobbyists. He  believed that every  tax related  decision the                                                                   
legislature  had  to  make  was  in  "peril  because  of  the                                                                   
lobbying  effort  of all  of  the interests"  pressuring  for                                                                   
credits,  exemptions,  or  deductions.  Opening  the  tax  to                                                                   
adjustments   unique  to  the   state  would  eliminate   the                                                                   
opportunity to  swiftly proceed  in implementing the  tax due                                                                   
to  the lobbying  process  weighing  in on  every  individual                                                                   
aspect of the tax.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:37:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  King  maintained  that  an  income  tax  attached  to  a                                                                   
percentage   of  federal  liability   actually  invited   the                                                                   
process Co-Chair  Seaton wanted to avoid due  to battles over                                                                   
adjustments.  He  relayed  from  personal  experience  paying                                                                   
taxes  in North  Carolina and  recalled a  very short  income                                                                   
tax form  for a  simple tax  based on  adjusted gross  income                                                                   
without  deductions.  He indicated  that  a state  could  set                                                                   
rates to achieve  the effect desired. It was  relatively easy                                                                   
to look  at the  structure of  federal tax  rates and  use "a                                                                   
percentage  of what  people  actually ended  up  paying as  a                                                                   
portion of  their income." He  offered suggestions on  how to                                                                   
adopt a broad  income tax based on adjusted  gross income. He                                                                   
informed  the committee  that by  adopting a  tax based  on a                                                                   
percentage  of federal  liability  the earned  income  credit                                                                   
was  also  adopted  by  default  resulting  in  half  of  the                                                                   
state's    citizens   not    contributing   because,    after                                                                   
adjustments, were  considered too poor to pay  federal income                                                                   
taxes.  However, if  the  state  used a  formula  based on  a                                                                   
percentage  of  adjusted  gross income,  the  flexibility  to                                                                   
share  the burden  more  equally was  greater  than a  system                                                                   
based  on a  percentage  of  federal liability.  He  declared                                                                   
that  there were  many  advantages  to using  adjusted  gross                                                                   
income and many states transitioned to its use.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair   Seaton   referred  to   slide   9  of   the   ISER                                                                   
presentation  in  regards to  nominal  versus  real terms  in                                                                   
calculating  budget forecasts  and  inflation. He  referenced                                                                   
the Department  of Revenue's (DOR),  Revenue Source  Book and                                                                   
its calculation of  oil price over time. He  wondered whether                                                                   
it was  necessary to deduct or  add 2.25 percent  annually to                                                                   
account for inflation.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
3:42:09 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Townsend replied  that sorting  out  what a  third-party                                                                   
had   done  when   forecasting  was   difficult  and   nearly                                                                   
impossible  to determine  unless specified  in the  forecast.                                                                   
He cautioned that  it was possible to include  many variables                                                                   
in  the  calculations  but it  was  imperative  to  determine                                                                   
whether  the   various  numbers  were  equivalent.   Co-Chair                                                                   
Seaton interjected  that the question would be  asked to DOR.                                                                   
He noted errors  in the recent calculations  on inflation and                                                                   
the rate of return for the Permanent Fund.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:44:35 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Gara referred  to Co-Chair  Seaton's point  about                                                                   
the legislature  being mired in  "fights" when  attempting to                                                                   
pass an  income tax. He wanted  fairness as an  objective. He                                                                   
wondered  whether it  was possible  to mimic  the 15  percent                                                                   
federal  income tax  rate  within each  tax  bracket but  the                                                                   
state  set its  own  tax rate.  He asked  about  the ease  of                                                                   
establishing  that  type  of   tax  structure.  Dr.  Townsend                                                                   
replied in  the affirmative  and added  that was exactly  his                                                                   
point.  He communicated  that the  rest of  the states  had a                                                                   
lot  of experience  with  the  income tax  and  they had  all                                                                   
moved  away  from an  income  tax  as  a percent  of  federal                                                                   
income  tax. He  furthered  that  a structure  was  necessary                                                                   
within  the tax  to  deal with  the  atypical  tax payer.  He                                                                   
agreed  with Co-Chair  Seaton  that any  structure of  income                                                                   
tax,  would   encourage  "rent  seeking."  He   defined  rent                                                                   
seeking  as   various  entities  investing  in   lawyers  and                                                                   
lobbyists  to seek  preferred  treatment under  the code.  He                                                                   
believed  that it  was what was  wrong with  the federal  tax                                                                   
code. He  agreed that the  same forces  would be seen  at the                                                                   
state  level. He opined  that  a lower tax  rate reduced  the                                                                   
issues but rent seeking was "inevitable."                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:48:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The meeting was adjourned at 3:48 p.m.                                                                                          

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
Alaska 2017-2026 NEI.pdf HFIN 2/10/2017 1:30:00 PM
Northern Ecomonics HFIN
House Finance 2-10-17.pdf HFIN 2/10/2017 1:30:00 PM
ISER AK Economy HFIN