• FPI Briefing: Response to State of the State FY 2027

    A recording of FPI's briefing in response to the State of the State FY 2027, delivered on January 15, 2026.

  • Statement on the FY 2027 State of the State

    On January 13, Governor Hochul delivered her annual address on the State of the State for Fiscal Year 2027. Her address centered affordability in New York, putting forward a flagship new deal with New York City to expand universal childcare statewide. However, the Governor’s speech has a glaring omission: the impact of Federal cuts on health insurance for up to one million New Yorkers.

  • Before the State of the State: New York’s Fiscal Outlook and Millionaire Tax Breaks

    On January 13, Governor Hochul will deliver the State of the State speech, which is expected to address matters of affordability in New York and the State’s relationship with the federal government. FPI here releases summaries of two previous publications on the State’s fiscal outlook and the tax breaks that New York’s millionaire earners will receive from the federal government this year.

  • What to Expect in Tomorrow’s State of the State?

    The State’s ability to pursue bold policy initiatives will depend on its fiscal outlook, which faces serious challenges in the coming years due to federal funding cuts. These are the issues to look out for in Governor Hochul's address.

  • A Tax Plan for Statewide Universal Childcare

    New York's public school system, built in the nineteenth century, entitles New Yorkers aged five to twenty-one to free education. More recently, policymakers, including Governor Hochul and Mayor-elect Mamdani, have committed to finishing the project by extending universal education and care to children under the age of five.

  • A Tax Plan for Universal Childcare in New York City

    The single most decisive factor in whether New York City ends up with a truly universal childcare system is whether that system is supported by sustainable, recurring revenue that grows with the program over time.

  • City Council’s Housing Bills Would Make Housing Less Affordable

    New York City Council will likely vote next week on a series of “term sheet bills” that would legislate new rigid restrictions on city-financed affordable housing development and preservation. These bills will drive up the cost of developing new affordable housing in the city and put major obstacles in the way of the incoming Mayor’s affordable housing agenda.

The Fiscal Policy Institute (FPI) is an independent, nonpartisan think tank that advances sound and equitable fiscal policy to strengthen New York’s economy through research, analysis and strategic communications.

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