Recently in Missouri Category

This weekend thousands of advocates for the wildly misnamed "Fair Tax" are expected to descend on Columbia, Missouri and hear from the likes of Neal Boortz and Joe Wurzelbacher, better known as "Joe the Plumber." We don't expect that this rally will inform Missourians that the proposal to eliminate corporate and individual income taxes and replace that revenue with sales taxes is likely to raise taxes on the poorest 95 percent of Missourians. Nor are attendees likely to learn that the sales tax rate necessary to make this a revenue neutral change isn't 5.11 percent (as often claimed), but a combined state and local tax rate of 12.5 percent.

Organizers of events like this have a difficult time acknowledging the real impact of the "Fair Tax" and instead focus on "simplicity" and the theoretical fairness of a sales tax. Luckily the press has delved a bit deeper into the issue and are pointing out the flaws in their proposal. For more on Missouri's so-called "Fair Tax" proposal, read ITEP's report.

It's safe to assume that there will be a special legislative session in Kentucky this summer. After all, the Blue Grass state is expected to face a billion dollar shortfall for the fiscal year starting July 1. Governor Beshear claims

he hasn't committed to calling back the legislature or decided what topic he would even select for a special session, but everyone knows a shortfall this large isn't going away without further action. So a flurry of proposals are being discussed from progressive income tax reform to increased gambling and even the so-called "fair tax."

The infamous "fair tax" legislation, which proponents are pushing all over the country, would eliminate corporate and individual income taxes, replace the lost revenue with increased sales taxes on a wide range of services, and eliminate most current sales tax exemptions. Before going too far down this path,

Kentucky legislators should take a moment to look at how that same proposal has faired in other states just this year.

Missouri, "fair tax" legislation passed the House of Representatives but went nowhere in the Senate. An ITEP analysis found that this proposal would raise taxes on middle-income Missourians and require a much higher sales tax rate than advertised.

A similar fate is expected in South Carolina where similar legislation has been introduced in the House. Advocates in South Carolina are hopeful that the legislation won't get very far.

Kentucky lawmakers should quickly jump off the failed "fair tax" bandwagon and instead look for ways to improve their state's tax structure while also increasing state revenue.

The So-Called "Fair Tax" Approved by Missouri House Would Raise Taxes for All Income Groups Except the Richest Five Percent

In the past month, the Missouri House of Representatives has acted like a spoiled child who really doesn't know what he wants. The esteemed body has voted to permanently reduce the state's income tax rates across the board by half of a percentage point (see ITEP's analysis of HCS for SB 71) and then separately voted to broaden the state's top income tax bracket and increase the costly and poorly targeted deduction for federal income taxes paid (see ITEP's analysis of HB 64).

Then, as if all that wasn't unfair or costly enough, the House decided to also approve the elimination of the individual and corporate income taxes altogether.

Yep, that's right, the full House of Representatives voted to simply eliminate a generator of roughly $5 billion and replace that revenue with a broad-based sales tax that exempts all business-to-business consumption.

Sound familiar? This legislation (HJR 36) is essentially the so-called "Fair Tax" proposal that anti-tax advocates have been pushing enthusiastically across the country. The Fair Tax proposal in Missouri, which would amend the state's constitution, would go before the voters if approved by the Senate.

Today ITEP joined in a release with the Missouri Budget Project highlighting analyses from both groups. ITEP's report concludes that HJR 36 would result in a net tax increase for all income groups except the richest 5 percent. It also finds that if the proposal is to be revenue-neutral (as proponents claim) and is to provide a rebate to Missourians (which they also promise), the new average state and local sales tax rate would have to be 12.5 percent. That's nearly double the 5.11 percent proponents of the bill claim, and it's at least a third more than the sales tax rates of neighboring states.

Missouri Budget Project's report finds that the additional sales taxes levied under HJR 36 would especially harm Missourians living on fixed incomes because they would apply to all services, including utilities, rent, medical care, food, prescription drugs, and child care -- most of which are things no other state makes subject to sales taxes.

This has been a tough couple of weeks for tax fairness advocates in the Show Me State. Yesterday, the Missouri House of Representatives passed House Bill 64, a regressive and costly piece of legislation that does three things. First, it raises the starting point for the 6 percent top income tax bracket from $9,000 to $50,000 of taxable income. Second, it raises the dependent exemption from $1,200 to $1,600. Third, HB 64 increases the deduction for federal income taxes paid from $10,000 for married couples ($5,000 for single filers) to $15,000 for married couples ($7,500 for singles).

See ITEP's fact sheet, which estimates that this legislation would cost $311 million in 2007 if it was in effect in that year. We expect the cost of the legislation to increase in future years as income grows.

Worse than the huge revenue loss is the regressive impact of the bill. About 88 percent of the benefits from these three tax changes would go to the wealthiest 40 percent of Missourians.

But this week was a demonstration of responsible lawmaking compared to what went on in the Missouri Capitol last week, when the notorious, so-called "fair" tax reared its ugly head and passed the House of Representatives. Advocates expect the bill will go before the Senate Ways and Means Committee next week. The ridiculously named legislation would replace the state's individual and corporate income taxes with sales tax revenue generated from a massive base expansion (including adding food and prescription drugs back to the sales tax base) in a supposedly revenue neutral way.

When advocating in favor of the bill, legislators pointed to Tennessee as an example of a state that reaps benefits from not having much of an income tax. Clearly lawmakers haven't investigated many quality of life indicators in the Volunteer State. For example, Tennessee ranks 6th in infant mortality rates, 9th in percent of children living in poverty, and 4th in percent of senior citizens living in poverty. It's pretty obvious that income tax elimination isn't guaranteed to create a high quality of life. The one thing that income tax elimination is guaranteed to create is a more regressive and unfair tax structure. To read more about this legislation, see the Missouri Budget Project's brief.

On April 9, Missourians lost a steadfast leader for tax justice, while advocates for progressive taxes across the country lost a colleague whose energy and devotion to her principles were second to none. Pat Martin founded and continued to lead Missourians for Tax Justice up until her death. She was active in economic and social justice issues for most of her life and was integral in the fight to remove food from the state sales tax base. Her resolve and dedication were often tested in Missouri's difficult political landscape, but Pat never let the situation get her down. Instead, she fought even harder and asked others to do the same. Pat expected much of those she worked with and even more of herself in the pursuit of justice. We will certainly miss working with her. It's been said of Pat's death that "Missourians have lost a bright light" and so have we. Read more about Pat's remarkable life here.

It's hard to believe, but there may actually be a trend in state tax policy more prominent than increasing cigarette taxes. Business tax credits aimed at spurring economic development have been among the most popular ideas in statehouses scrambling for ways to reduce unemployment. Just last week, we described a plan in Minnesota to boost investment tax credits and a budget in California containing a few credits of its own. This week, proposals to do the same in Iowa, Kentucky, and Missouri are under discussion.

In Iowa, Republican lawmakers have suggested paying (via tax credit) half the salary of each new job created by private businesses. Oddly, because this payment would be administered through the tax code rather than as a direct grant, the debate has become confused to the extent that this policy has been labeled as a way to return to a "market-based, capitalistic system".

An excellent op-ed out of Kentucky helps clear things up a bit, noting that Gov. Beshear's proposed expansion of business tax incentives would be a costly, nontransparent, and likely ineffective way of encouraging job growth. The op-ed goes on to argue that a "broader" approach, including better targeted and more closely scrutinized spending programs, could do far more good than creating more tax credits.

Finally, as an expansion in economic development tax credits works its way through Missouri's legislature, the admission of at least one legislator that he is a "recovering tax credit addict" helped to shine some light on the unfortunate politics behind these types of tax credits. These programs can cost a state enormously, and are rarely defensible on principled tax policy grounds. Instead, they constitute a type of spending done through the tax code -- commonly referred to as "tax expenditures" -- which add complexity, shrink the tax base, require higher marginal rates, and offer little if anything in terms of making the system more responsive to individuals' and businesses' ability to pay.

Last week was a rough one for tax justice advocates in many states, but especially those working in Missouri. The House Committee on Tax Reform heard not one, but two bills attempting to eliminate to state's corporate income, individual income, and estate taxes. The revenue loss from eliminating these taxes would supposedly be raised from eliminating all sales tax deductions and exemptions. These bills were based largely on the propaganda of Americans for Fair Taxation, a group which supports the elimination of all taxes based on income.

The group's slogan for promoting these types of tax changes is "Freedom. Fairness. Savings," words which have nothing to do with the policies they promote. Relying more on consumption taxes rather than income taxes only ensures that poor families pay more in taxes as a share of their income than do wealthy families. The only people who save under these "fair tax" proposals are wealthy folks. The Missouri Budget Project was one of many groups who testified against these unfair and expensive proposals, arguing "that these bills undermine the principles of fairness and equity that should be the basis of our tax system."

The poorly named Tax Payer Bill of Rights (TABOR) is a cap on allowable spending enacted in Colorado in 1992. Since then, it has become clear that the measure demolished the state's ability to fund higher education, infrastructure and health care. Despite voters approving a ballot measure to suspend Colorado's TABOR for five years, the concept of a spending limit is still rearing its ugly head in both Maine and Missouri.

In Maine, the Heritage Policy Center has a revised TABOR proposal (a previous proposal was defeated by a vote of the people two years ago), which promises to combat the state's "overspending" problem while making it quite difficult for taxes to be raised. This November, Mainers will be asked to vote once again on the TABOR. Read the Maine Center for Economic Policy's report about the many serious problems with this proposal.

Meanwhile, a proposal to cap spending is making its way through the Missouri House of Representatives, which will serve as another test for the pro-TABOR forces. Read the Missouri Budget Project's warning about TABOR's impact on the state.

We've recently highlighted a variety of progressive revenue raising options gaining serious attention in New York and Wisconsin. This week we bring you yet another idea that's recently been the subject of debate, though this one applies to fewer states. Those seven states still offering income tax deductions for federal taxes paid (i.e. Alabama, Iowa, Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, Louisiana, and Oregon), should immediately repeal, or at the very least dramatically scale back, that deduction.

The federal income tax deduction takes what is perhaps the best attribute of the federal income tax -- its progressivity -- and uses it to stifle that very attribute at the state level. Since wealthy taxpayers generally pay more in federal taxes than their less well-off counterparts, allowing taxpayers to deduct those taxes from their income for state income tax purposes is a gift to precisely those folks who need it least. And since most state income tax systems possess a degree of progressivity, those better-off taxpayers who face higher marginal tax rates are benefited even more by being able to shield their income from tax via this deduction.

Iowa Governor Chet Culver most recently drew attention to this problem while urging lawmakers this week to end the deduction. The idea has also recently garnered attention in Missouri, where ITEP recently testified on a bill that would, among other changes, eliminate the deduction. Finally, another bill making its way through the Alabama legislature seeks to end the deduction for upper-income Alabamians.

With three of the seven states that still offer this deduction considering its elimination, this is definitely one progressive policy change to keep an eye on.

Missouri Advocates Bucking the Trend

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If state tax budget shortfalls and regressive tax structures were a popularity contest, Missouri would be considered one of the cool kids. Like most states, Missouri has both an enormous shortfall and a regressive tax structure to contend with. The discussions in Missouri about ways to solve the state's fiscal mess (as in many other states) have mostly focused on program cuts.

But this week advocates from the Tax Justice for a Healthy Missouri Coalition bucked the status quo. A hearing was held by the House Tax Reform Committee on a bill, supported by the coalition, that would broaden Missouri's tax brackets, add new top tax rates, eliminate the state's deduction for federal income taxes paid and introduce a refundable credit targeted toward low- and middle-income folks.

The bill would also raise over a billion dollars. For a cash-strapped state that hasn't seen its top bracket change since 1931, this bill offers a chance to modernize the income tax, increase revenue, and make the tax structure fairer overall. It's rare that one piece of legislation has the ability to do so much good. For ITEP's testimony on this important legislation, click here.

Last week Missouri lawmakers joined Tax Justice for a Healthy Missouri and the newly formed Long Spoons Coalition to hold a press conference promoting HB 567, a bill that would modernize Missouri's outdated income tax structure (the top $9,000 bracket hasn't changed since 1931) and produce needed revenue while cutting taxes on average for the bottom 60% of Missourians. It's fine time that this sweeping legislation receives attention from policymakers and the press.

A progressive tax reform proposal is also in the news in Kentucky, where some lawmakers want to balance their state budget in a progressive way, combining revenue-raising options with tax cuts for low- and middle-income folks. The Kentucky reform plan includes an Earned Income Tax Credit, new top rates and brackets, and broadening the sales tax base. The bill's sponsor will be meeting with Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear about the bill's merits -- a meeting we hope goes well.

Arizona voters wisely rejected Proposition 105, a proposal that would have placed a nearly insurmountable obstacle in the way of Arizona residents seeking to raise their own taxes through the referendum process.

Arkansas voters approved a measure to institute a state lottery. While the state could certainly use the additional revenue, Arkansans should be wary of funding their government through regressive revenue sources such as the lottery.

Maine residents rejected an increase in the alcohol and soda taxes to fund health care. While it's certainly a bad thing that these taxes are regressive (as well as unlikely to exhibit sustainable growth in the coming years), the ludicrousness of the fervent opposition this relatively minor tax created can be read about in this Digest article and this blog post.

Maryland residents also decided to secure additional revenues for their government via expanded gambling, in the form of 15,000 new slot machines. Check out this Digest article to learn about some of the problems with this proposal.

Missouri also attempted to increase its haul from gambling. Increased gambling taxes and the elimination of limitations on the amount of money one is allowed to lose were approved by voters this Tuesday. This Digest article explains how the proposal leaves much to be desired.

Minnesota voters decided to go through with a 3/8ths percent sales tax hike. While the environmental causes to which the funds will be dedicated are undoubtedly worthy, the regressive way in which voters decided to go about funding the projects (through the sales tax) is far from ideal.

Nevada residents voted to amend their constitution to require that all new sales and property tax exemptions be subjected to a benefit-cost analysis, and accompanied by a sunset provision that will force their reexamination in the future. While the proposal sounds good in theory, its requirements are relatively loose in practice. It will be up to Nevadans to carefully watch their representatives to ensure that the spirit of this law is adhered to. Learn more about this proposal here.

Missouri may bring us another example of a "sin tax" that results in state government promoting the "sin." If Proposition A survives legal challenges, Missouri voters will be asked to approve the ballot initiative which would limit the number of Missouri casinos, raise the gaming tax to increase school funding, and eliminate the loss limit. There are a lot of competing interests represented by the initiative, which explains why there are legal challenges in the works against the proposal. It would increase funding for education, which pleases most people. It would limit the number of casinos, which pleases voters opposed to gambling. And it would let people lose as much as they want to lose, which pleases casinos and compulsive gamblers. Some may see this initiative as an odd collection of conflicting goals, while others might see it as a clever compromise. Either way, one issue left unresolved is the uncertainty over how much revenue could really be raised over the long-term in this manner. This uncertainty, along with the ethical issues involved, should prod Missouri lawmakers to see the limits in this type of quick fix and start considering a more adequate and progressive income tax.

As we mentioned last week, this is the season for fiscally irresponsible sales tax holidays to purportedly give relief to working people on their back-to-school shopping. Sales tax holidays are a bad idea for the states' budgets and tax-payers alike. Low-income families probably cannot time their purchases to take advantage of a sales tax holiday, and it can be an administrative headache for retailers and government. Sales tax holidays are also poorly targeted to low-income individuals compared to other policy solutions such as low-income tax credits.

Now another group of states is ready to forgo needed tax revenue in exchange for a few dollars off the purchase price of various goods. These states include Alabama, Iowa, Missouri, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia among others with holidays scheduled Friday through Sunday.

Meanwhile, a Birmingham News editorial points out that the sales tax holiday is a "gimmick" that has allowed state lawmakers to divert attention from their outrageously regressive tax code. Alabama is one of only two states that doesn't exempt or provide a low-income credit for its sales tax on groceries. If that were done, Alabama consumers would save far more money than they do on a three-day sales tax holiday (an average family of four would save about seven times as much). But instead of exempting groceries from sales taxes or raising the state's second-lowest in the nation income tax threshold, lawmakers pretend to help low-income Alabamians with a few tax-free shopping days a year.

Georgia's sales tax holiday began on Thursday and exempts articles of clothing costing less than $100, personal computers cheaper than $1500, and school supplies under $20. This week, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution mentioned some of the more amusing exemptions covered by that state's sales tax holiday. These exemptions include corsets, bow ties and bowling shoes. As the author noted, guys headed to their first day back in school "might combine the bow ties and bowling shoes, then just head straight for the restroom to collect their free swirlie." The article also mentions ski suits, highly unlikely to be big sellers in Georgia, and adult diapers, seemingly unrelated to the average family's back-to-school needs. Georgia lawmakers may want to revise their list of exemptions to concentrate on discounting necessities, or better yet, end this farce once and for all.

Earlier this month Missouri Governor Matt Blunt signed into law legislation that could have disastrous effects on schools. The law essentially creates a new restriction on property taxes beyond the one that already exists. It requires localities to lower their property tax rates to offset increases in property tax assessments -- even if the rate is already below the existing rate ceiling. Missouri already has "rollback" procedures in place for localities that were already at the rate ceiling if assessed property values rose faster than inflation.

Even legislators who voted for this legislation understand that the new law will have a negative impact on the amount of money available for local schools. State Senator Frank Barnitz says, "I think that we will see funding improve to public education through our general revenue dollars, through our taxpayer dollars, and not necessarily see it only through property tax values." Only time will tell if lawmakers like Senator Barnitz are able to gain support for increased education spending on the state level, in the meantime locals may need to start preparing for a budget crunch.

In better news, this legislation also includes provisions that increase the state's well-targeted property tax credit. The credit operates like a circuit breaker and ensures that property tax cuts go to renters and homeowners for whom the property tax is most burdensome.

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