Warning! Your browser is extremely outdated and not web standards compliant.
Your browsing experience would greatly improve by upgrading to a modern browser.

Growth in Colorado Enterprise Revenue

State enterprise revenue in Colorado grew to $27.1 billion in fiscal year 2021, accounting for 40% of all state spending.[i]

A state enterprise is defined as “a government-owned business that receives revenue in return for the provision of a good or service [and] receive[s] up to 10 percent of its annual revenue from state and local government sources combined.”[ii] Enterprises are exempt from the spending growth limits of TABOR because they collect “fees” and not taxes.
  • In under three decades, enterprise revenue has grown by over $26 billion dollars—from $742 million across five enterprises in FY94, when TABOR went into effect, to $27.1 billion across 18 enterprises in FY21.
  • Though some enterprise revenue comes from federal sources, particularly during the last two years due to COVID-19 relief, total enterprise revenue amounted to $4,665 per Coloradan, up from $1,998 in FY14 and $381 in FY04.

Recent transportation funding legislation and a new voter-approved paid leave program will increase fee-based revenue to enterprises by an additional $1.5 billion in 2024.

  • Proposition 117, passed in November 2020, requires that fee increases projected to raise any enterprise’s revenue by at least $100 million over five years be approved by voters. SB21-260 is projected to raise fee-based revenue by $200 million in FY24 and a total of $5.4 billion within a decade. The legislation avoided the voter approval requirement of Prop. 117 by distributing its fee increases across multiple funds and four new enterprises.[iii]
    • SB21-260 includes a 27-cent delivery fee, which is estimated to raise $75.9 million in FY23.
  • Colorado’s paid family and medical leave program, set to launch in 2023, will be funded by fees paid by most Colorado employers and employees. According to CSI’s modeling, these fees will exceed $1.3 billion in 2024 and could reach well over $2 billion per year in the long run.[iv]

[i] https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Tkdi_yVHqBai5Uo4_Drsz5SjeO6Qcktd/view

[ii] https://leg.colorado.gov/sites/default/files/interested_persons_memo_regarding_tabor_enterprises_2019.pdf

[iii] https://leg.colorado.gov/sites/default/files/documents/2021A/bills/fn/2021a_sb260_r1.pdf

[iv] https://commonsenseinstituteco.org/proposition-118-a-statewide-paid-family-and-medical-leave-program-for-colorado-but-at-what-cost/

 
 
Jobs & Our Economy
October Jobs and Labor Force Update

Employers in Colorado added 9,000 jobs in October. The private sector grew by 7,800 while government employment increased by 1,200.

November 19, 2024 Jimena SanchezCole Anderson
Jobs & Our Economy
Colorado Jobs and Labor Force Update – September 2024 Update

Colorado's total employment increased by 12,700 in September. Private-sector employment grew by 11,300 while government employment increased by 1,400.

October 22, 2024 Jimena SanchezCole Anderson
Jobs & Our Economy
Inflation Misery Index

The average person in Colorado must spend $10,451 more per year – nearly 13% of their annual income – to consume the same quantity of goods and services they did in 2019.

October 09, 2024 Cole AndersonZachary Milne