Buoyed by news of a projected $1 billion state budget surplus, DFL Gov. Mark Dayton said Thursday he is prepared to seek millions of dollars in tax reductions.
The projected surplus is part of an economic forecast released Thursday that shows Minnesota is moving solidly into the black, with strong job and wage growth that is outpacing the national average.
"This is a great place to be," Minnesota Management and Budget Commissioner Jim Schowalter said of a budget picture that appears to end the state's most harrowing fiscal crisis since the Great Depression.
Dayton said he won't make a formal proposal on tax cuts until February, when the state will get a second economic forecast and the Legislature will come back into session.
"We know we are very early in the biennium and there are a lot of uncertainties out there," said Schowalter, head of the state budget office. "We want to make sure any changes we do make are sustainable."
The change of fortunes allows the state to pay off the last of the $2.7 billion it borrowed from K-12 public schools while mired in recession, along with money the state borrowed from the airports fund in 2008.
That still leaves $825 million for tax breaks, more spending or other needs just as Dayton and legislators head into an election year.
Dayton would use that money to eliminate the three business sales taxes created earlier this year that have prompted blistering attacks from the business community, particularly a sales tax on warehousing services.