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The Newsroom - 2002 |
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Analyst's program helps planners with projections

October 25, 2002 - With a few keystrokes on a laptop computer, economic
analyst Jeremy Aguero can find projections on Nevada's
2004 prison population, the funding needed in 2007 for
welfare programs or the percentage of casino revenues in
2009 from food and beverages.

Aguero and his Las Vegas company, Applied Analysis, have
developed an elaborate computer program designed to help
the governor and state budget planners make more
educated projections about the caseloads for state
programs and the money needed to fund them.

The advantages of the program, which he developed as an
adviser to the Governor's Task Force on Tax Policy in
Nevada, are that it is easy to use and can provide
detailed data in seconds that otherwise could take hours
if one had only paper files and a calculator. And if the
user wants the information presented in a bar chart or
pie chart, that can be done, too.

Mike Hillerby, Gov. Kenny Guinn's deputy chief of staff,
said the governor thinks highly of the new program.

"He was surprised by what it could do," Hillerby said.
"The governor thinks it could be beneficial to the
budget process."

Aguero constructed the program by compiling caseload and
budget numbers for each state program from at least 1990
to develop a historical basis for projections that run
through at least 2010. He also relied on data provided
by the 2000 Census and the federal Bureau of Labor
Statistics.

The state already makes long-term budget projections but
they aren't nearly as detailed as those emanating from
Aguero's laptop.

The program assumes that inflation will be 2.6 percent
annually through 2010, and that Nevada's population
growth will have decreased from 4.5 percent annually in
the late 1990s to 1.5 percent eight years from now.
"Over a 10-year period there will be spikes and
valleys," he said. "For instance, we expect labor
growth, which is now at 2 percent, to go back up to 3.6
percent in 2003 and 2004 and then go back to 2 percent
by 2010." |
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Applied Analysis provides professional services in urban
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The reason for that particular spike is an anticipated
increase in jobs caused by such new developments as
Steve Wynn's proposed $2.5 billion Le Reve resort on the
Strip.

But if inflation or growth projections change, Aguero
said the new figures can be fed into the computer
program to change the revenue and caseload data
accordingly.

"I can change the projections for 2006 and it will
change everything from the number of kids who will be in
school to the number of people depending on welfare
services," Aguero said.

There is information on roughly 800 line items. For
instance, he can predict that Nevada's visitor count, a
projected 48.4 million this year, should reach 56.3
million by 2010.

To test the accuracy of his model, Aguero's program
calculated that Nevada should have raised $1.747 billion
last year. The actual revenue collections, $1.751
billion, were a mere $4 million above his projection, or
two-tenths of 1 percent.
State economist Bill Anderson said the computer program
will be a helpful tool for the state Budget Division.

"It'll be a supplemental factor as we put together our
budgets for the future," Anderson said. "What it will be
is another piece of input that we will take into account
when we put together our own forecasts."
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Article Copyright ©: S. Kanigher, Las Vegas Sun |
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