"The news isn't all bad," my newspaper-reading partner consoled as I bemoaned the latest headlines from Ukraine. "Look at that state surplus — $9.25 billion!"
"Hmmpf," I countered. "I don't believe it's that big — and legislators shouldn't either."
Permit me to explain my skepticism, and while I'm at it, to voice some ambivalence about the merits of temptingly big surplus forecasts in state government.
To be clear: I'm casting no aspersion on the competence of the state agency professionals and their big-league consultants who prepare budget forecasts twice each year, in November and February. They're good at what they do, and they follow state forecasting law religiously.
But that law required that this forecast be based on the state of the economic world in about mid-February. On Feb. 24, Russian forces invaded Ukraine, and the world changed.
Management and Budget Commissioner Jim Schowalter and State Economist Laura Kalambokidis acknowledged as much on Feb. 28 as they rolled out the surplus projection. Already on Day Four of the pounding of places Minnesotans were just learning to pronounce — Mariupol, Kharkiv, Zaporizhzhia — Schowalter and Kalambokidis were making "forecast risk" and "uncertainty" their mantras.
Capitol reporters have heard similar lines from this duo before. But seldom have they been uttered with such emphasis.
"We just don't know how this is going to play out," Kalambokidis told me last week. "This feels like a time when things could change a lot, in ways that we just can't predict."