Governor Andrew Cuomo wants state Comptroller Tom DiNapoli to perform an assessment of the effect the global spread of coronavirus has had on the state's revenue picture. 

For now, it's unlikely the virus has impacted the current year budget, Cuomo said. But the concern is over how the budget that is due to be enacted on April 1.

"The world has changed since we did the revenue projection, so I'm asking the comptroller, please review the revenue projection for this year and next year and tell me what adjustments would you make for the revenue projections," Cuomo said in an interview on WAMC on Tuesday morning.

The stock market has had its largest single-day decline since the 2008 recession amid concerns over the spread of the virus across the globe. The virus' spread has snarled supply chains while also roiling markets.

The engine of the state's economy is the financial market. But Cuomo said the shocks of the virus may stretch beyond that for New York.

"Reservations at hotels are being are canceled," he said. "Tourism is way down. You may be looking at a nine-month economic slowdown across the board. This is a global economic situation now. Before we seal the budget April 1, I don't want to say our projects for next year were false."