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Gov. Andrew Cuomo during a briefing on April 23, 2020. (Courtesy Gov. Andrew Cuomo press office) Gov. Andrew Cuomo during a briefing on April 23, 2020. (Courtesy Gov. Andrew Cuomo press office)

Gov. Andrew Cuomo during a briefing on April 23, 2020. (Courtesy Gov. Andrew Cuomo press office)

Jill Terreri Ramos
By Jill Terreri Ramos May 5, 2020

Cuomo’s claim on New York’s contributions to federal treasury needs clarification

If Your Time is short

  • Rockefeller Institute, part of SUNY, found that over four years, 2015 to 2018, New York taxpayers paid $116 billion more in federal taxes than the state received in federal funding. During the same period, Kentucky received $148 billion in federal funds more than Kentuckians paid in federal taxes. 
  • Cuomo was right on the numbers, wrong on the timeframe. 

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell recently objected to the idea that the federal government would send money to help state and local governments dealing with high infection rates of Covid-19. The political affiliations of the elected leadership in these states, such as New York, California and Illinois did not go unnoticed by McConnell, a Kentucky Republican. "Stop the Blue State Bailouts," read a news release from McConnell’s office. He suggested in a radio interview that these states declare bankruptcy instead.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, responded swiftly, calling McConnell’s bankruptcy suggestion "one of the really dumb ideas of all time." 

Cuomo then claimed that New York sends more money to the federal government than it gets in return, and that McConnell’s state regularly gets "bailed out" by the rest of the country. 

"He represents the state of Kentucky, okay?" Cuomo said at a recent press briefing. "When it comes to fairness, New York state puts much more money into the federal pot than it takes out. Okay? At the end of the year, we put into that federal pot $116 billion more than we take out. Okay? His state, the state of Kentucky, takes out $148 billion more than they put in." 

"Senator McConnell, who’s getting bailed out here?" he said later. "It’s your state that is living on the money that we generate. Your state is getting bailed out. Not my state."

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We wondered if Kentucky gets $148 billion more from the federal government than it puts in, and if New York puts in $116 billion more than it takes out.

SUNY report

We approached Cuomo’s office, which said the governor was referencing an analysis from the Rockefeller Institute, published in January. The Rockefeller Institute of Government, part of the State University of New York, produced the report with support from Cuomo’s executive branch.

The report found that New Yorkers sent $116 billion more than they received in benefits over fiscal years 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018, while Kentucky received $148 billion more than it sent over the same period. In each of those years, New York led all other states in sending more money to the federal government than it receives, a measure also known as the "balance of payments." Meanwhile, 42 other states received more from the federal treasury in 2018 than they contributed, according to the report.

The Rockefeller Institute, using preliminary data, estimates that in the year ending on Sept. 30, 2018, New Yorkers sent $22 billion more to the federal government than they received, more than the amount sent by residents of the next two states that gave more than they got: New Jersey, with a deficit of $11.5 billion, and Massachusetts, with a deficit of $9.1 billion. When calculating the balance of payments on a per-person basis, New Yorkers paid $1,125 more than they received, more than all but three other states, according to the report.

A state’s balance of payments to the federal government can be affected by whether a state has military bases, defense contractors, or is home to a large population of federal workers, all of which require the federal government to spend money in that state. Also, the number of its residents that receive Social Security, Medicare, and welfare benefits, or whether a state is home to a lot of high-income households that pay more federal taxes, affects the balance of payments. In New York, the deficit between taxes paid and federal funds received is driven by high earners and businesses paying more in taxes, according to the Rockefeller Institute. 

New York’s independently elected comptroller, Thomas DiNapoli, a Democrat, also tracks New York’s balance of payments. In January, DiNapoli found that in 2018 New York’s deficit was higher, and that Empire State taxpayers sent $26.6 billion more to Washington, D.C., than the state received in federal funds. Kentucky, meanwhile, received $29.9 billion more in federal funds than its taxpayers paid, DiNapoli found. The Comptroller’s Office analyzed New York’s balance of payments in federal fiscal year 2013, 2016, and 2017. The cumulative deficit in the balance of payments from 2013, 2016, 2017, and 2018 was $111.5 billion, according to the comptroller.

"As in past years, the imbalance largely reflects New York’s comparatively high federal tax payments," DiNapoli wrote. "The State generated nearly $254 billion, 8% of the $3.2 trillion in federal tax receipts. By contrast, the $227 billion in federal spending the State received represented 6% of the nationwide total, virtually the same as New York’s share of the U.S. population."

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The late Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, a Democrat who served from 1977 to 2001, brought attention to this imbalance of payments in a report he issued annually, known as "the fisc." In his 1985 report, for example, Moynihan found that New Yorkers had paid $2.1 billion more than the state received in federal funds during the previous year.  

PolitiFact fact-checked a similar claim in 2018, specifically that New York is a "donor state," and found it to be True. Our reporting then showed that in a system of progressive taxes, where wealthier people pay more, and that money is redistributed to people in need, it’s not unusual that states with wealthy residents give more than they get.

Our ruling

Cuomo said that "at the end of the year," New York puts $116 billion more into the federal treasury than the state receives in federal funds, while Kentucky receives $148 billion more than it contributes.

Cuomo was referencing figures from a report from the Rockefeller Institute, which has been widely cited.

However, a listener to Cuomo’s news conference would likely think that these figures represent yearly contributions. They are actually four-year cumulative totals contained in the Rockefeller Institute analysis.

We rate this claim Half True.

Our Sources

Rev.com, Andrew Cuomo New York Covid-19 Briefing Transcript April 23, 2020. Accessed April 23, 2020.

Email interview, Jason Conwall, spokesperson, Gov. Andrew Cuomo, April 23, 2020. 

PolitiFact New York, "Is New York a ‘giver state’ to the federal treasury?" Nov. 2, 2018. Accessed April 23, 2020. 

PolitiFact California, "Does California give more than it gets from Washington D.C.?" Feb. 14, 2017. Accessed April 25, 2020. 

New York Times, "McConnell Says States Should Consider Bankruptcy, Rebuffing Calls for Aid," April 22, 2020. Accessed April 23, 2020. 

Rockefeller Institute, report, "Giving or Getting, New York’s Balance of Payments with the Federal Government," January 2020. Accessed April 25, 2020. 

Email interview, E.J. McMahon, founder and research director, The Empire Center for Public Policy, April 27, 2020. 

Office of the New York State Comptroller, report, "New York’s Balance of Payments in the Federal Budget, Federal Fiscal Year 2018," January 2020. Accessed April 27, 2020. 

Associated Press, "AP FACT CHECK: Blue high-tax states fund red low-tax states," Dec. 9, 2017. Accessed April 27, 2020. 

Hugh Hewitt radio show transcript, April 22, 2020. Accessed April 28, 2020. 

Email interview, Matt Ryan, spokesperson, Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli, April 28, 2020.

New York Times, obituary, "Daniel Patrick Moynihan Is Dead, Senator From Academia Was 76," March 27, 2003. Accessed May 4, 2020. 

New York Times, "Moynihan Says New York State Is Shortchanged," Aug. 5, 1985. Accessed May 4, 2020. 

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