My home state of California seems to  find itself in one financial mess after another. Reports emerged yesterday  that the state’s estimated tax revenue for November was $439 million  less then the government had expected. With the fiscal year only have  over, the state’s revenue is already short by an astonishing $1 billion.  Some financial experts assert the decline is only a preview of what  is to come, and that the upcoming year will be even more difficult on  California’s budget.
Schwarzenegger is due to release his  budget for the coming fiscal year in January. California Legislative  Analyst Mac Taylor said in November the state will face a deficit of  $14.4 billion beginning in July. That’s in addition to a $6.3 billion  gap opening up in the current year as several projections within the  budget falter or miss revenue projections.
“In many respects, the steps to close  next year’s budget gap will be even more difficult and more challenging  than what we’ve just had to do this year,” Department of Finance  spokesman H.D. Palmer said yesterday.
California has been among the most affected  by the recession as a wave of home foreclosures, rising unemployment  and the 2008 stock market tumble dissipated expected tax receipts. From  February through July, lawmakers worked to close a record $60 billion  deficit with spending cuts, temporary tax increases and other one-time  fixes. The unemployment rate rose to 12.5 percent in October from 8  percent the year before and 4.8 percent in July 2006.
 
