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Texas Sales Tax Collections Went Up In July — And Were Higher Than One Year Ago

A restaurant worker cleans a table at Gueros Taco Bar in South Austin on June 24, 2020.
Miguel Gutierrez Jr.
/
The Texas Tribune
A restaurant worker cleans a table at Gueros Taco Bar in South Austin on June 24, 2020.

For the first time in months, Texas’ sales tax revenue increased when compared to the same period last year despite the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, Comptroller said Monday.

Texas collected $2.98 billion in — 4.3% more than in July 2019. That revenue, which mainly reflects purchases made in June, was “better than expected, despite the high unemployment due to the pandemic,” Hegar said in a statement.

“The increase was due to a surge in collections from the retail trade sector,” he said, noting that collections from e-commerce "were up sharply" as consumers shopped online. More online marketplace and remote retailers, Hegar said, were required to collect and remit Texas taxes on their sales thanks to inside their boundaries and two Texas laws that went into effect in October.

Meanwhile, he said, receipts from other major sectors in the state, such as construction, services and restaurants, "showed significant declines."

Monday's news follows months of fallout related to the pandemic, which began spreading across Texas in March. After the governor ordered much of the state to shut down in an attempt to curb the spread of the virus, Hegar that the state had seen its steepest decline in over a decade with April sales tax collections. The next month, Hegar said . As collections dropped, skyrocketed — a record-high 13.5% rate was reported in April.

But Hegar warned that the positive news from July collections could turn dour again in the coming months after related to the pandemic expired at the end of July.

"With about 1.3 million Texans with continued claims for insured unemployment and another 184,000 receiving benefits under the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program in June, it's likely that consumer spending was significantly supported by enhanced benefits provided by the federal CARES Act and related legislation enacted in response to the COVID-19 pandemic," he said.

Hegar also said that revenue collections from other major taxes for the state were still significantly down. The oil production tax, for example, was down 40% from the same month last year, he said, while the hotel occupancy tax was down 42% from July 2019. The natural gas production tax, meanwhile, was down 71% from July 2019.

Sales tax revenue is the state's single largest source of funding and influences the state budget-writing process at the Legislature. And, for the past several months, that revenue has been on the decline compared to the same month in 2019. The state's total revenue for May, June and July this year, Hegar said Monday, was down 5.3% compared to the same period last year.

The Legislature will all but certainly face an uphill climb with the budget process when state lawmakers reconvene for a regular session in January. Hegar revised his revenue estimate projecting general revenue available for the state's current two-year budget would be roughly $11.5 billion less than originally estimated. Hegar also said the state was on track to end the biennium, which runs through August 2021, with a deficit of nearly $4.6 billion.

State leaders have already moved to try to offset some losses from the economic fallout. In May, Gov. , Lt. Gov. and House Speaker directed certain state agencies and higher education institutions to identify a 5% budget cut for the current biennium. Hegar's latest estimate, he said, did not include those savings, which will reduce the projected shortfall.

The Texas Tribune provided this .

Cassandra Pollock is an engagement reporter for The Texas Tribune, which she joined in June 2017 after a stint as a fellow during the 85th Texas Legislature. She graduated in 2017 from The University of Texas at Austin’s School of Journalism. Cassi has previously reported for The Daily Texan, the university’s official student newspaper, and The Washington Examiner in Washington, D.C.