
-
Editorials
- Bradenton Herald
- Daytona Beach News-Journal
- Florida Times-Union
- Florida Today
- Ft. Myers News-Press
- Gainesville Sun
- Lakeland Ledger
- Miami Herald
- Naples Daily News
- NWF Daily News
- Ocala Star-Banner
- Orlando Sentinel
- Palm Beach Post
- Pensacola News Journal
- Sarasota Herald-Tribune
- TCPalm
- Sun-Sentinel
- Tallahassee Democrat
- Tampa Bay Times
- Columnists
- Cartoons
-
Press Releases
- Sayfie Review
- FL Speaker of the House
- FL Agriculture Commissioner
- FL Senate President
- FL Governor
- US Senator Moody
- FL Attorney General
- US Senator Scott
- FL CFO
- Congressional Delegation ≻
- Matt Gaetz
- Neal Dunn
- Kat Cammack
- Aaron Bean
- John Rutherford
- Michael Waltz
- Cory Mills
- Bill Posey
- Darren Soto
- Maxwell Frost
- Daniel Webster
- Gus Bilirakis
- Anna Paulina Luna
- Kathy Castor
- Laurel Lee
- Vern Buchanan
- Greg Steube
- Scott Franklin
- Byron Donalds
- Sheila Cherfilus McCormick
- Brian Mast
- Lois Frankel
- Jared Moskowitz
- Frederica Wilson
- Debbie Wasserman Schultz
- Mario Diaz-Balart
- Maria Elvira Salazar
- Carlos Gimenez
- Political Links
-
News Links
- Drudge Report
- NewsMax.com
- AP Florida News
- ABC News' The Note
- NBC News' First Read
- Florida Channel
- Florida TV Stations
- Florida Radio Stations
- Capitol Update
- Florida Newspapers
- Florida Trend
- South Florida Business Journal
- Tampa Bay Business Journal
- Orlando Business Journal
- Jacksonville Business Journal
- News Service of Florida
- Politico Playbook
- Washington Post The Daily 202
-
Research
- Florida Fiscal Portal
- Search Florida Laws
- Search House Bills
- Search Senate Bills
- Search County, City Laws
- Search County Clerks' Records
- Cabinet Agendas, Transcripts
- Search Executive Orders
- Search Atty. General Opinions
- Search Supreme Court Docket
- Florida Supreme Court Rulings
- Search Florida Corporations
- Search Administrative Rules
- Proposed Administrative Rules
- View Advertised Contracts
- Refdesk.com
- Government Services Guide
- Electoral Vote Map
-
Reference
- Florida House
- Florida Senate
- Find Your Congressman
- Find Your State Legislator
- Find Your Local Officials
- Find Government Phone #'s
- Florida Agencies
- Florida Cities
- Florida Counties
- Florida Universities
- County Tax Collectors
- County Property Appraisers
- County Clerks of Court
- County Elections Supervisors
- MyFlorida.com
- OPPAGA
Sun-Sentinel: Don't abandon Hope Florida probe | Editorial
Herald: Another high-profile Democrat jumps ship, deepening a brand crisis in Florida | Opinion
Sun-Sentinel: Fighting to save what's left of natural Florida | Editorial
Sun-Sentinel: A political power play at Broward College | Editorial
Herald: For now, common sense speaks louder in debate to undo post-Parkland gun laws | Opinion
Sun-Sentinel: Missing a Marco Rubio who no longer exists | Editorial
Herald: Florida revenge porn victims are about to get more recourse, even if not enough | Opinion
Herald: As it joins forces with ICE, Doral risks betraying its Venezuelan roots | Opinion
State sees revenue bump in April
June 4, 2021
© 2021 The News Service of Florida. All rights reserved; see terms.
TALLAHASSEE --- As federal stimulus checks gave Floridians more money to spend, the state’s April revenue collections topped an economists’ forecast by nearly 24 percent.
The Legislature’s Office of Economic & Demographic Research on Friday reported April general-revenue collections came in $797.2 million above a projection for the month. That gave Florida its ninth consecutive month exceeding revenue expectations as the state recovers from the economic fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic.
A report issued by the office noted the April revenue total is “by far, the greatest overage since the pandemic began in the 2020 calendar year.”
When he signed a record $100 billion state budget Wednesday, Gov. Ron DeSantis said anticipated revenue collections through June --- the final month of the current fiscal year --- should push budget reserves from $9.5 billion to above $10 billion.
“If you go back to last April (2020), the shortfalls that everyone was predicting, look, we were obviously concerned about it,” DeSantis said while appearing at a New Smyrna Beach restaurant. “But as we got into the summer, you know, we were open. I mean, I remember everyone, you know, a lot of people were trying to tell me to close restaurants like this last summer. We didn't do it. We kept business open. We got kids in school. We did all those things. And the result was our economy really started to rebound.”
In its new report, the Office of Economic & Demographic Research credited the tax collections to activity that mostly occurred in March, which the report said “continued to benefit from the most recent round of stimulus checks to households, redirected spending from the hard-hit service sector and some consumers’ ability to draw down atypically large savings that built up during the pandemic.”
The state had been forecast to collect a net general-revenue amount of about $3.395 billion in April but brought in $4.192 billion, the report shows.
The April figures --- the forecast was set by the state’s Revenue Estimating Conference on April 5 --- came after revenue topped forecasts for March by $299.6 million, February by $298.5 million, January by $246.7 million and December by $336.7 million.
Sales taxes make up the largest portion of state general revenue, which is used to fund programs such as schools, health care and prisons.
For April, the state collected $2.799.3 billion in sales taxes, $447.6 million over the estimate. Figures topped expectations in six categories watched by economists, including tourism, which has lagged throughout the pandemic.
Taxes collected from tourism in April exceeded the forecast by 12.1 percent. Meanwhile, tax collections on consumer non-durable items were up 16.8 percent from the forecast, while collections on automobiles were up 33.8 percent.
Collections were also above forecast in most other types of taxes that go into general revenue. Examples were corporate income taxes (48.9 percent); documentary stamp taxes (44.1 percent); intangible taxes (51.4 percent) and beverage taxes (90 percent), according to the report.