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NYC Faces $12 Billion Budget Gap, Largest Since 2008 Crisis

Comptroller Mark Levine attributes the $12 billion deficit to prior underbudgeting and one-time fixes, marking the largest late-cycle shortfall since the Great Recession.

  • On Friday, New York City Comptroller Mark Levine announced a $2.2 billion FY2026 shortfall and a $10.4 billion FY2027 gap at a Lower Manhattan briefing.
  • Blaming past budgeting choices, Levine said years of underbudgeting and reliance on one‑time budget solutions under former Mayor Eric Adams led to projected FY26 spending exceeding revenues and unaccounted recurring expenses.
  • Levine's analysis found 3.8 billion in unbudgeted FY26 costs, including rental assistance, overtime, homeless shelter expenses, Department of Education due‑process cases and Metropolitan Transportation Authority contributions.
  • Mayor Zohran Mamdani must produce a balanced preliminary budget in February, with the state budget due next week and Comptroller Levine meeting State leaders in Albany next month.
  • This marks the first time since the Great Recession the city faces a late-cycle shortfall this large, while the Health Insurance Stabilization Fund is insolvent with roughly $3.1 billion in unpaid liabilities.
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  • 38% of the sources lean Left, 37% of the sources lean Right
38% Left

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City Journal broke the news in on Sunday, January 11, 2026.
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