Finance
Efficient Capital Markets Can Unlock Africa’s Domestic Savings
1
By Samira Mensah, Head of Analytics & Research Africa, S&P Global Ratings
Efficient capital markets can transform Africa’s limited domestic financial assets into investments that spur economic growth. By connecting institutional investors, pension funds and foreign investors, capital markets enhance economic development by increasing the availability of funding for long-term projects.
Efficient domestic capital markets can not only address governments’ significant funding gaps but can also ensure that critical infrastructure developments—such as transportation, energy and telecommunications—are adequately financed, ultimately driving economic growth and employment. Supported by transparent and comparable risk frameworks, efficient domestic capital markets can build confidence among domestic and foreign investors and enhance resilience during periods of global risk aversion.
In our view, African capital markets currently lack two key building blocks.
In our view, African capital markets currently lack two key building blocks. Firstly, with limited exceptions, regulatory frameworks generally lag the International Organization of Securities Commissions’ (IOSCO’s) global standards, which cover listing standards on securities exchanges, development of digital market infrastructure and improvements in the timeliness and transparency of regulatory disclosures of issuers’ financial results, including environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors and green-finance taxonomies.
Some countries, such as South Africa, Kenya, Morocco and Mauritius, are more advanced than others. The misalignment of regulatory frameworks with international norms stems from the gap between adoption and implementation through legislation, which deters international and local investment.
Secondly, the absence of standardized risk assessments leads to information gaps and limits investor participation in primary and secondary bond markets. Credit benchmarks—such as sovereign-yield curves, credit ratings and market-implied risk measures—can help in this regard. They distill complex financial, macroeconomic and institutional information into consistent and comparable signals.
As such, these benchmarks provide a standardized framework for assessing creditworthiness, supporting consistent credit analysis and facilitating decision-making based on transparent and comparable data. They are relevant to investment vehicles with specific investment mandates and may influence the availability of capital, which is crucial for infrastructure projects.
Capital markets can spur economic growth
Capital markets can play a central role in turning domestic savings into productive investments. This is particularly the case in Africa, where development needs are high and incomes are rising from a low base. Additionally, innovative financial technologies, such as fintech platforms, attract more small savings—including money sent home by migrants—that can also fund investments. However, mobilizing domestic savings for investments in local economies remains a significant challenge because many transactions are in cash and outside the financial system.

According to the Africa Finance Corporation (AFC), African sovereign-wealth funds, pension funds, insurers, central banks and commercial banks hold an estimated US$4 trillion in financial assets, representing 130 percent of Africa’s gross domestic product (GDP) in 2025. Long-term institutional capital accounts for $1.1 trillion of the $4 trillion, while African sovereign-wealth funds manage only about $145 billion in assets under management (AUM)—less than 1 percent of global sovereign-wealth funds’ AUM.
Although banking assets comprise the majority of financial assets, they are typically short-term, and banks rely on customer deposits to fund lending activities. This underscores the mismatch between banks’ short-term funding profiles and the economy’s long-term financing needs, particularly in underdeveloped financial systems.
South Africa holds the largest share of Africa’s financial assets, followed by Egypt and Nigeria. South Africa contributes 20-25 percent to Africa’s financial assets. This reflects the country’s outsized role within the continent’s savings pools, its large and mature pension system and its highly developed banking sector. We estimate that the South African banking sector’s assets amount to nearly 100 percent of GDP, while nonbank financial institutions—including pension and insurance funds—account for close to 120 percent of GDP.
Smaller economies that are important regional financial hubs—such as Morocco, Mauritius and Kenya—also play a meaningful role. Aggregate financial assets represent 80 percent to more than 200 percent of these economies’ respective GDPs. Yet a significant portion of this capital does not flow into long-term productive investments.
In several countries, the economic effects of financial assets are muted because large shares are either invested in government securities or placed offshore. For example, the bank-sovereign nexus remains particularly high in Egypt and Kenya, where government securities account for 30-60 percent of banking assets. This contributes to crowding out private investments and increases fiscal-financial linkages. Pension funds are further constrained by specific investment mandates. We understand that only 5 percent of their assets are allocated to alternative investments.
Capital allocation rules could channel domestic savings into real sectors
Regulations across various jurisdictions permit pension funds and sovereign-wealth funds to invest abroad, albeit to varying degrees. For instance, South Africa, which holds the largest share of the continent’s institutional savings, allows its pension funds to invest up to 45 percent offshore, while Nigeria’s regulatory framework limits pension funds’ aggregate offshore exposure to 20-25 percent.
While this facilitates diversification, it also means that a significant portion of domestic savings is invested in fixed-income securities outside Africa, thereby curbing the potential for local economic development. Similarly, when African sovereign-wealth funds invest internationally, their portfolios tend to be diversified away from African assets, further diluting the potential developmental benefits of domestic savings.

Intra-African investment remains limited
However, existing cross-border banking and investment activity points to significant untapped potential. Pan-African banks are important for regional financial connectivity, but their cross-border activities are limited by risk-return considerations, leaving significant potential for greater mobilization of long-term investment. These banking groups’ networks facilitate payments, trade settlement and sovereign financing, but remain only partially leveraged for long-term investment mobilization.
For example, Moroccan banking groups have built extensive footprints across francophone West and Central Africa but their assets outside Morocco account for less than 10 percent of their consolidated assets. Although Nigerian and Kenyan banks support trade finance and corporate lending across regional trade corridors, their home markets hold the lion’s share of their consolidated assets.
Cross-border institutional capital flows remain modest. Pension funds and insurers largely invest domestically—often in government securities—or allocate savings offshore. This reflects regulatory fragmentation, currency risks, shallow capital markets and limited regional investment-vehicle opportunities. Joint investments in infrastructure, productive sectors and regional value chains remain low.
The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) aims at deepening financial integration. By seeking to expand intra-African trade and regional value chains, the AfCFTA aims to increase demand for cross-border financing, risk-sharing and long-term capital. This, however, will require more regional capital-market integrations, harmonized regulations and co-investment platforms that pool African savings.
Leveraging existing pan-African banking networks, regional bond markets, infrastructure funds and blended-finance vehicles could redirect Africa’s capital toward continental growth. This could, in turn, reduce reliance on external financing and strengthen the links between domestic savings and productive investments under the AfCFTA framework.
The catalytic role of MLIs in capital mobilization
Multilateral lending institutions (MLIs) can mobilize long-term funding, provide credit enhancement and support the introduction of new financing structures. To improve capital efficiency and preserve lending capacity, several MLIs have increasingly used balance-sheet optimization tools in recent years, including portfolio risk-sharing and originate-to-distribute-type arrangements.
More broadly, MLIs’ engagement extends beyond direct financing to include policy support, institutional and capacity-building development and infrastructure. These measures may support longer-term improvements in market functioning and economic integration.
Afreximbank’s (African Export–Import Bank’s) push to implement the Pan-African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS) aims to accelerate regional trade integration under the AfCFTA. The PAPSS seeks to facilitate cross-border settlements in local currencies and reduce trade costs, while the Africa Trade Gateway plans to ease cross-border trade and payment flows. The benefits of these platforms for intraregional trade and transaction costs will likely emerge gradually.
Even so, structural constraints remain. In particular, the limited availability of first-loss concessional capital and uneven risk appetite in the private sector continue to constrain the scale and pace at which blended-finance solutions can be deployed. Although MLIs’ continent-wide initiatives could support the gradual expansion of public-private partnerships and risk-sharing structures, their effectiveness will likely depend on sustained policy support, transaction standardization and stable macro-financial conditions.
Strengthening Africa’s capital markets
We believe the development of capital markets is crucial for the growth of African economies and their private sectors.
We believe the development of capital markets is crucial for the growth of African economies and their private sectors. Unlocking Africa’s abundant funding potential would benefit from establishing effective regulatory regimes that encourage listings without overburdening issuers. Strengthening capital markets by facilitating both debt and equity raisings and listings can broaden market access and deepen market liquidity.
Excluding South Africa, capital markets across Africa remain fragmented and shallow. The Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE), the largest African stock exchange by market capitalization, has a total market capitalization of South African rand (ZAR) 24.6 trillion (about US$1.5 trillion)—more than three times South Africa’s GDP. It ranks among the top 20 stock exchanges worldwide.
In contrast, other exchanges are more modest, as their private sectors’ funding profiles rely primarily on bank loans rather than accessing capital markets. Countries such as Nigeria, Egypt, Côte d’Ivoire, Kenya and Morocco have significant domestic financing sources, but these often come at high costs.
Governments largely define these domestic bond markets because they are the largest issuers, and commercial banks are the primary buyers of government bonds. South Africa has the most liquid and diverse bond market, but government securities dominate local-currency issuances (270 percent of GDP).

Countries such as South Africa and Nigeria have introduced reforms to unlock nonbank domestic capital, notably through pension-fund reforms that allow greater capital allocation to alternative assets. Other reforms aim to develop new financing platforms, facilitate green financing and set benchmarks for how capital markets can price climate and infrastructure-related risks.
In 2022, the African Development Bank (AfDB) issued its inaugural local-currency ZAR200-million green bond, which was listed on the JSE. The JSE is advancing sustainability-linked financial instruments and improving ESG disclosures, aligning African capital markets with global best practices.
In 2026, the JSE launched its nature platform and listed Africa’s first nature-linked performance-based bond—a ZAR2.5-billion issuance by FirstRand Bank, one of the country’s top banks. In 2025, the Rwanda Stock Exchange (RSE) launched its Green Exchange Window (GEW), supported by the Luxembourg Stock Exchange (LuxSE).
Collectively, these labeled debt instruments can act as catalysts for blended-finance structures, mobilizing more private capital.
Governments play a vital role in equalizing access to information and developing deep, transparent sovereign-bond markets. Well-established government-bond yield curves in these markets serve as important pricing benchmarks for corporates and the wider economy. This enhances investor confidence and facilitates more informed investment decisions. Ongoing efforts by governments to increase transparency, provide timely information disclosures and maintain robust regulatory oversight will maximize the benefits of sovereign-bond markets.

Clear and credible credit signals further enhance pricing transparency, enabling investors to better assess risk and return. Greater confidence in valuations supports active participation, improves secondary-market liquidity and strengthens price discovery. Over time, this creates a virtuous cycle—whereby increased participation reinforces market efficiency and resilience, ultimately supporting sustainable economic growth in Africa.
Despite structural shortcomings, domestic investors have increasingly stepped in to meet financing needs. Infrastructure projects are now more often financed through domestic local-currency capital markets and financial institutions, including development-finance institutions. We believe that Africa’s economic integration will be intrinsically linked to more developed domestic capital markets.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Samira Mensah is Managing Director, Research & Analytics Africa, and Country Head for South Africa at S&P Global Ratings, based in Johannesburg. She leads thought leadership and market outreach initiatives across Africa, with a particular focus on African credit markets and Islamic finance. A frequent speaker at industry conferences and contributor to research publications, Samira recently presented at The Africa We Build Summit in Nairobi.
Finance
Care New England eliminates 30+ positions, citing financial strain
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (WPRI) — Dozens of workers at Care New England have been laid off due to ongoing financial pressures amid Rhode Island’s “escalating” healthcare funding crisis.
Care New England announced the elimination of more than 30 leadership and non-clinical positions Tuesday, citing unprecedented economic challenges placing a continued strain on hospitals across the state.
According to CNE President and CEO Michael Wagner, the healthcare group has been “aggressively pursuing margin initiatives” in order to offset a $20 million budget deficit.
“Current financial conditions have made additional cost-saving measures unavoidable, but decisions like these that affect our workforce are especially difficult because they impact valued employees, colleagues, and the patients and communities we serve,” Wagner said in a press release.
He pointed to rising labor and supply costs, the increasing need to provide uncompensated care, low Medicaid reimbursement rates, as well as proposed federal changes that threaten uninsured Rhode Islanders as the primary reason for the system “restructuring.”
CNE said it will “work closely” with affected employees, offering resources and assistance.
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Finance
UCFB academic co-authors report into finances in elite golf – UCFB
UCFB academic Professor Rob Wilson has contributed to a new report examining the changing financial landscape of elite golf, with the findings highlighting the growing impact of external investment, rising player earnings and shifting commercial models across the sport.
The Leonard Curtis Golf Finance Report, authored by UCFB’s Professor Rob Wilson and Dr Dan Plumley, explores the finances of the PGA Tour, DP World Tour and LIV Golf at a pivotal moment for the game following the decision by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) to end its funding for LIV Golf at the conclusion of the 2026 season.
The report, launched by Leonard Curtis on 21 May, provides detailed analysis of tournament prize money, player earnings, broadcast rights and tour finances, offering insight into the economic sustainability of elite golf and the wider implications for the global sporting landscape.
Rob, Professor of Applied Sport Finance and Dean at UCFB, said the sport is entering a defining period of financial change.
“Elite golf is now at a defining financial crossroads, with the traditional economics of the sport being fundamentally reshaped by external investment, escalating player earnings and changing commercial models,” he said.
“The withdrawal of PIF funding from LIV Golf creates major questions around the long-term viability, governance and future structure of the global game.
“The Leonard Curtis Golf Finance Report positions golf beyond a sporting contest, and is a live case study in sports finance, sustainability and strategic disruption playing out right before our eyes.”
The report’s findings reveal the scale of financial disparity within the men’s professional game. Analysis of financial data from 2020 to 2024 shows the PGA Tour generated average annual revenues of approximately $1.4 billion during that period, with revenues more than three times higher than those of the DP World Tour.
Meanwhile, LIV Golf’s revenues rose from $31.5 million in 2022 to $92.6 million in 2024, although the report highlights that the breakaway tour still remains significantly behind its established rivals commercially.
The research also demonstrates how competition from LIV Golf has contributed to rising costs across the sport, with both the PGA Tour and DP World Tour recording increasing losses amid surging tournament purses and intensified competition for elite players.
Professor Wilson and Dr Plumley’s analysis also examines how player earnings have been transformed by LIV Golf’s emergence, particularly for players outside the traditional top tier of the sport. The report highlights examples including Jon Rahm, Joaquin Niemann and Talor Gooch, whose earnings through LIV Golf have significantly altered the established financial structure of professional golf.
The report includes a foreword from former European Tour coach and Sky Sports Golf commentator Simon Holmes, who reflected on the wider implications of golf’s financial evolution.
“Capital can accelerate change, but it cannot manufacture meaning,” Holmes said. “If golf loses the emotional connection between the professional game and the millions of people who play it then no amount of money will fully compensate for that loss.”
The Leonard Curtis Golf Finance Report is the latest in a series of Business of Sport publications produced by Leonard Curtis, complementing its annual reports on rugby and cricket finance.
Finance
Governor cites financial gap for family aid program, hints at cuts and puzzles lawmakers – WV MetroNews
West Virginia leaders are still assessing recent comments by Gov. Patrick Morrisey, who indicated the state has a $40 million structural gap in funding for Temporary Assistance for Needy Families.
The safety net program, often called TANF, provides monthly cash payments and support services to low-income families with children to help them achieve economic stability and self-sufficiency. It is a federally funded, state-run program often referred to as “welfare.”
Morrisey, responding to questions during a press conference last week, suggested the state might have to respond to a financial gap by making cuts to West Virginia’s childcare assistance and a voucher program that helps low-income families afford school clothes.
He also seemed to make reference to family support centers, but it was not clear.
However, the governor acknowledged all of that remains under review and would need to be discussed with legislators.
“There are a few that are out there that we have to make the decisions. We have not announced anything yet. We want to confer with the legislature, but for example, the clothing allowance, the FNS, and then childcare – they’re all in that bucket,” Morrisey said.
Since then, lawmakers and other close observers have said they need to learn more about the underpinnings of the financial gap cited by the governor, as well as his early ideas for what to do about it.
“I think there’s a lot of questions to still be answered,” House Speaker Roger Hanshaw, R-Clay, said on MetroNews Midday.
“None of that discussion was had with us during the regular legislative session this year, so we did what we did with respect to the budget for the upcoming fiscal year and the remainder of this fiscal year, absent that revelation. So the first thing we have to do is understand exactly how we got where we evidently are.”
Hanshaw and other lawmakers said legislative finance personnel would be working to learn more about the state’s position with TANF funding.
“We’re what we’re not going to be very excited about, I don’t think, would be substantial cuts to other services that are that are needed, necessary and beneficial,” Hanshaw said.
“There are there are things that the TANF funds support, other than direct payments, that that are also important to a lot of families, particularly some of the low-income families in West Virginia. So, we’re not excited necessarily to be making cuts to those programs, but we first of all don’t necessarily understand the announcement yet.”
Spotlight on TANF spending
The governor’s discussion of TANF funding came during a broader discussion of state agency audits that the administration concluded could result in millions of dollars in savings for the state.
However, the conclusions drawn about TANF were adjacent to those audits rather than direct conclusions from them.
“The TANF issue was identified as part of the administration’s broader review of the Department of Human Services, alongside the audit work being conducted across multiple departments,” said Lars Daleside, communications director for the governor, after a request for clarity from MetroNews.
“It was not a standalone ‘TANF audit’ in the traditional sense.”
The governor’s verbal explanation and Daleside’s followup indicated a structural imbalance developed over the years. The administration cited a temporary federal funding increases associated with the covid-19 pandemic that allowed programs supported by TANF to expand significantly.
Spending levels grew beyond what the recurring annual federal TANF block grant could support, the administration said.
As a matter of straight math, they said a federal block grant for TANF amounts to $100 million a year, while projected obligations tied to programs currently supported through TANF exceed that amount by about $40 million.
Earlier on, the state was able to rely on temporary carryover balances to bridge those gaps, Daleside said, but those balances are projected to be depleted in the coming years.
Morrisey said the emergency spending levels created a big structural deficit, “and quite frankly, we had these silos operating within human services that led to inadequate oversight of the TANF budget. So we’re obviously looking to fix that.”
The governor said funding for Temporary Assistance to Needy Families goes to help vulnerable families, support children and help people move toward stability and self-sufficiency. “Our kids and our families definitely need the help from that TANF program,” Morrisey said.
Going forward, he said, “You’ll be seeing that we’ll have those briefings with the legislature with an opportunity to solve a number of these problems.
“You can’t run deficits, and you can’t run them because you forgot to turn off the spigot with covid (emergency funds) going offline, and we’re certainly committed to being fiscally responsible, while also helping people who are very much in need.”
West Virginia budget trends and TANF
A review of West Virginia’s general revenue budget over the past few years shows relatively flat spending for TANF until recently.
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families runs through a federal block grant that requires a state match called “maintenance of effort.”
Both the federal and state portions were pretty stable from 2021 to 2025. Then the state budget data shows a jump that reflects the amount the governor cites.
The most significant driver is a $42,000,000 increase in the “Current Expenses” category of the federal TANF block grant.
Fiscal Year 2021
State Maintenance of Effort: $25,819,096
Federal Block Grant: $127,660,783
Total: $153,479,879
Fiscal Year 2022
State Maintenance of Effort: $25,819,096
Federal Block Grant: $127,725,762
Total: $153,544,858
Fiscal Year 2023
State Maintenance of Effort: $25,819,096
Federal Block Grant: $133,070,827 (includes $4,617,546 in Federal Coronavirus Pandemic funds)
Total: $158,889,923
Fiscal Year 2024
State Maintenance of Effort: $25,819,096
Federal Block Grant: $133,678,671 (includes $4,617,546 in Federal Coronavirus Pandemic funds)
Total: $159,497,767
Fiscal Year 2025
State Maintenance of Effort: $23,237,186
Federal Block Grant: $134,664,564
Total: $157,901,750
Fiscal Year 2026
State Maintenance of Effort: $25,819,096
Federal Block Grant: $176,664,564
Total: $202,483,660
Fiscal Year 2027
State Maintenance of Effort: $25,819,096
Federal Block Grant: $177,081,080
Total: $202,900,176
The fiscal 2026 budget appears to mark the transition where this gap is no longer covered by carryover funds and is instead reflected as an increase in budgeted federal spending authority.
Kelly Allen, executive director of the West Virginia Center on Budget & Policy think tank, suggests a likely explanation for what happened is that the state was diverting reserves to pay for programs related to TANF.
As those reserves began to run dry, the expenses continued and what is exposed is the true cost.
“It’s a flexible block grant from the federal government, states have a lot of flexibility in how they can use it, and they don’t have to spend their whole allocation in a year; they can run up a reserve and bank some of those dollars, and that’s what we did for several years,” Allen said on MetroNews Talkline.
At one point in 2023-2024, she said, West Virginia had a reserve of more than $120 million — more than an annual allocation but spent down in recent years.
When the governor talks about a “deficit,” Allen interprets that as the state spending down that TANF reserve, not a traditional budget deficit
“So, when the governor says ‘deficit’ that evokes a certain thought, but I think what he’s actually saying is we’ve been spending down into that reserve, and eventually that’s gonna run out,” she said. “And why we’ve been spending down into that reserve is that we’ve been funding a lot of childcare subsidies with TANF dollars.”
Some good news, Allen said, is that the governor alluded to an 18-month window to address the financial situation.
“This is a lot of reading between the lines,” she said, “but that to me says we have time for legislators to find alternative sources of revenue to continue these really, really important programs.”
To Jim McKay, state director of Prevent Child Abuse West Virginia, what the governor described represents a TANF surplus, not a deficit.
“The governor himself said that the state has 18 months of reserves remaining. That is not a crisis requiring immediate cuts to programs serving children and families,” McKay said.
Over many years, McKay said, the state actually underspent TANF and a large reserve grew to over $100 million.
“In recent years, the state has drawn on the TANF surplus to fund services such as Family Support Centers, Legal Aid, and child care,” McKay said.
“These programs help children stay safely at home with their families, which is the core statutory purpose of TANF. West Virginia leads the nation in the rate of children in foster care. We should be investing more in keeping families together, not less.”
Meanwhile, he cited emerging consequences: organizations across the state are waiting with uncertainty because their contracts for funding in July have not yet started the process for renewal.
“They heard the governor describe a deficit that has caused concern throughout the state that programs will have to stop serving families in a few weeks,” McKay said.
“This is occurring despite the approval of the budget bill that included sufficient funding from a combination of TANF and reserve TANF appropriations, but the contracts have still not gone out. These delays have real-life consequences.”
Broad picture of state use of covid dollars
The Pew Charitable Trusts has spent significant focus on how states have been able to manage covid relief funds, particularly as the emergency financial support was made available and then contracted.
Rebecca Thiess, who helps lead Pew’s managing fiscal risks project, focuses on how federal policies affect states.
Most states “did a pretty good job spending the one-time dollars on one-time expenses,” Thiess said in an interview with MetroNews. But, “some states did kind of put money towards operational expenses in the study that we did.”
On the whole, she said, states like West Virginia may benefit from financial caution.
“I do think that if the spending continued for even just a few years at COVID levels in an unsustainable way, you know, that’s an argument — I think you hear the governor saying this — for kind of more practical management of federal funds, so you don’t get kind of unpleasant surprises like this,” Thiess said.
West Virginia is following a lot of the same trends as most states right now, said Justin Theal, senior officer for The Pew Charitable Trusts. He said policymakers are facing the most widespread fiscal budgetary pressures since at least 2020, driven by factors like slower revenue growth and rising spending demands.
“During those years of unusually strong revenue growth, many states made long-term commitments in response to those temporary highs, like tax cuts, wage increases for public employees, expansions of spending programs. Those are now becoming much harder to afford now that revenue is back towards more normal conditions,” he said.
And now states are navigating the wind down of those pandemic funds. That marks a transition from an extraordinary period for state leaders who had sigificant extra resources and fiscal flexibility.
“But now they’re asking questions like, were the programs that we expanded or the tax rate changes that we enacted — were those affordable only with temporary resources? Do we have the ability to meet our ongoing spending with enough revenue? And that’s a very real part of the policy debate right now,” Theal said.
‘We need to find out if that’s actually the case or not’
West Virginia lawmakers now have work ahead to determine the basis of the governor’s conclusions and to assess priorities with available state funds.
“I think most are equally confused and maybe it’s designed this way,” said Delegate Anitra Hamilton, a Democrat from Monongalia County who is a member of the House health committee.
Hamilton was among the delegates in meetings last week about topics like data centers while the governor was making his remarks. She said she started receiving texts and emails about what the governor had said while she sat in those meetings.
“Until more information is given that can provide clarity, we can only restate what has been said and make assumptive remarks,” she said.

It’s the governor’s responsibility to make his case, said Delegate John Williams, D-Monongalia, speaking on “Talk of the Town” on WAJR Radio.
“We need to find out if that’s actually the case or not,” said Williams, who is the ranking Democrat on House Finance. “The Legislature, we just allocated $177 million to TANF, so let’s see if the governor is correct.”
Williams added, “We would like some more evidence. If that’s the assertion he’s making, we’d like that pointed out somewhere that we have a structural deficit. As far as we were concerned, when we passed our budget for fiscal 2027 just two months ago, there was no such structural deficit.
“So if he thinks that there’s going to be a deficit the burden of proof is on him and so far we haven’t seen anything.”
Hanshaw, the House speaker, agreed that more homework is necessary. But he believes there’s time to gather more information.
“As I understand it, we’re not in a catastrophic situation yet; it’s just going to be a problem that we face toward the end of the fiscal year,” Hanshaw said. “So we’ve got a little time on that left, not a lot. We’ve got a little time on that left, so step one for us is having our finance team understand exactly how we got where we are.”
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