Emily Corwin

Emily Corwin reported on economics for the StateImpact New Hampshire blog until the project merged with the New Hampshire Public Radio site in July 2013. She is now NHPR’s Seacoast Reporter. You can follow her on Twitter at @emilycorwin, and find her stories on NHPR.org.

Medicaid Expansion Or No, State Will See Increased Costs, Study Says

The Affordable Care Act will make it easier for eligible patients to sign up for Medicaid, which will swell the ranks of Medicaid recipients whether or not states opt to expand eligibility to more individuals, according to a new report from the Kaiser Family Foundation. This will increase Medicaid costs even for states that do not accept federal dollars to expand coverage.

According to the report, New Hampshire would spend $315 million more if all states choose to expand Medicaid than if none do.

Read more on the Kaiser Health News Blog, or really get into the weeds, by reading the report itself.

The Case To End Software Patents

At the beginning of November, the University of New Hampshire School of Law officially designated its library as the “New Hampshire Patent and Trademark Resource Center.” The hope is for the center to “promote a culture of innovation and entrepreneurship,” says David Kappos, Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property, and Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office.

Incidentally, we just came across a video made by George Mason University professor Alex Tabarrok. In the video, Tabarrok makes the case that patents encourage innovation in some fields, but hinder it in others.

Tabarrok blogs for Marginal Revolution.

State Agencies Submit Optimistic Budget Requests

State agencies requested nearly $700 million in new spending at the state’s agency budget hearings, a 26 percent increase over the last state budget.

“It is important for us to understand that we will not be able to reverse course all at once,” Governor-Elect Maggie Hassan warned, after reiterating her promise to reverse the last legislature’s budget cuts. “We must be prepared to continue to make tough, fiscally responsible decisions to ensure that we can invest in our priorities, including protecting the health and safety of our citizens and building an innovative economy that will ensure long-term growth,” Hassan said at the opening session of hearings.

After the first hearing, Senate Finance Chairman Chuck Morse asserted his disappointment in the budget requests, saying “few agencies referenced their reduced spending alternative budgets or proposed areas for efficiencies.” Morse commended Hassan for “noting many of these requests are too high.”

UNH Study: Post-Recession Underemployment Remains High

This piece was reported by contributor Brian Wallstin

New research by the University of New Hampshire’s Carsey Institute sheds light on why millions of Americans might view the economic recovery as more illusion than reality.

In the aftermath of the 2007-2009 recession, the number of part-time workers in search of full-time jobs  — a category known as the “underemployed” — remains stubbornly high, especially among nonwhites and people younger than 30. Continue Reading

Good News On Income Disparity In N.H May be Short-Lived

Note: This story was reported by contributor Brian Wallstin

Few trends are as worrisome to economists than the growing disparity between the rich and everyone else. The incomes of the wealthiest Americans have been rising dramatically since the 1970s, while wage gains among the poor and middle-class have stagnated.

Before the recession, however, low- and middle-income households in New Hampshire managed to gain on their wealthier neighbors compared to other states, according to a new study by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities and the Economic Policy Institute. Continue Reading

Wind Farm Brings Relief For Taxpayers in Groton, But Not Lempster. And Grafton?

flickr/.martin.

Residents of Grafton gathered Tuesday night for a town-hall style meeting hosted by the Spanish renewable energy company Iberdrola. The company is hoping to build a wind farm in Grafton, and has already developed wind farms in Groton and Lempster. One of the selling points for towns is the potential for tax revenue from the wind farm to offset residents’ property taxes.  This is a quick look at how property taxes in Groton and Lempster have been affected by Iberdrola’s wind farms. Continue Reading

Advocates Of Failed Income Tax Amendment Say Their Goals Were Achieved

Ballot Question One – a constitutional ban on the income tax — did not receive the 67 percent of votes it needed to become law on Tuesday.  It did, however, receive 57 percent of the vote: a healthy majority.

During an otherwise Democratic sweep on Tuesday, this GOP initiative received more votes in New Hampshire than either Ovide Lamontagne – or even Mitt Romney.  Continue Reading

Does The Election Of Maggie Hassan And President Obama Mean More Taxes For Granite Staters?

NHPR

That’s what Republicans have wanted to you believe all election season.

Sounding exhausted by the question, Maggie Hassan spokesperson Marc Goldberg says an income or sales tax is still off the table for Hassan. “As Maggie said repeatedly during the campaign, she opposes an income tax and would veto one if she was governor.”

When asked about increasing business taxes, Goldberg was less specific. “She will work with the legislature to craft a balanced budget,” was his response. Continue Reading

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