Alaska's Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD) continues to provide financial relief to its residents, with eligible individuals ...
The Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD) is a unique financial initiative that underscores Alaska's commitment to sharing its natural resource wealth with its residents. Created in 1976, the PFD is managed ...
A trio of current and former Alaska lawmakers presented views differing from the governor's on how to solve the state's ...
Calling Gov. Dunleavy’s plan a wealth transfer ignores how deficits have actually been closed for the last decade.
Alaska’s fiscal regime does not serve the state well. Alaska has no broad-based tax, no binding spending limit, no revenue cap and no enforceable rules governing what happens with surplus revenues.
The Alaska Permanent Fund Dividend is one of the most unusual in America due to the unusual distribution mechanism of its oil wealth, as Alaska has a unique and special system of payment of an annual ...
Kiehl said he’s focused on everything from balancing the state budget to addressing largely unregulated water pollution by ...
Amid a severe state budget deficit, the Alaska Senate Finance Committee is proposing the lowest Permanent Fund dividend in five years and — if adjusted for inflation — the lowest dividend ever. On ...
Gov. Mike Dunleavy has proposed a 4% statewide summer sales tax, effective through 2034, as part of his plan to bring ...
Fifty years ago, Alaskan voters amended the state constitution to set aside a portion of the state’s revenues from oil and minerals, establishing the Alaska Permanent Fund to benefit all generations ...