View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

Personal Income by State, 1st Quarter 2023
June 30, 2023
This technical note provides background information on the estimates of one-time state refundable tax
credits included in state personal income for the third and fourth quarters of 2022 and the first quarter
of 2023. The complete set of estimates is available on the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA)
website; a brief summary of highlights is also posted on the website.
State refundable tax credits impact on third- and fourth-quarter 2022 and first-quarter 2023 state
personal income
In the last two quarters of 2022 and the first quarter of 2023, some state governments provided relief to
the residents of their states by way of one-time refundable tax credits. Refundable tax credits typically
allow taxpayers who meet certain eligibility criteria to reduce the amount they are required to pay in
income taxes. If these credits exceed the taxpayer's total tax liability, the excess is paid to them as a
refund. Some states chose to distribute the full amount of these credits directly to individuals during the
last two quarters of 2022 and the first quarter of 2023.
Data typically are not available to estimate separately the value of refundable tax credits that are
regularly offered by state governments. The value of these tax credits is therefore recorded only
implicitly as a reduction in tax receipts and not in personal income. However, a combination of media
reports and state-level administrative data were available to estimate the value of these one-time tax
credits. As a result, BEA recorded them as an increase in government expenditures (specifically as
government social benefits to persons or personal current transfer receipts) rather than as a reduction
in government receipts. The total value of these credits is reflected in increases in the personal current
transfer receipts component of personal income in the states affected.
For more information on refundable tax credits and their relation to the National Income and Product
Accounts, see the FAQ “How are state refundable tax credits recorded in the National Income and
Product Accounts (NIPAs)?”.
The scope and dollar value of the refundable tax credit programs varied across states, and all states,
except California, Idaho, Maine, and South Carolina, ended the distributions in the fourth quarter of
2022. Nationally, these programs accounted for 0.2 percent of total personal current transfer receipts in
the first quarter. The refundable tax credit was particularly significant in Maine, accounting for 7.6
percent of personal current transfer receipts (table 1).
Page 1 of 2

Page 2 of 2