Showing posts with label income tax. Show all posts
Showing posts with label income tax. Show all posts

Sunday, December 13, 2015

Tax cuts exacerbating Oklahoma's bust-driven budget crisis

By SEAN MURPHY December 12, 2015 7:19 PM                             
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Even as Oklahoma's economy was roaring thanks to an oil boom, Sarah Dougherty watched in disbelief as the Tulsa elementary school her children attend expanded class sizes and eliminated teachers because costly tax cuts and incentives ate up much of the surplus revenue.
Republican Gov. Mary Fallin and the GOP-led Legislature pushed through the latest cut, a quarter-point reduction in the top income tax rate, two years ago when $100-a-barrel crude buoyed the state's coffers. While the average tax filer will save only about $85 a year under the cut taking effect Jan. 1, it comes at a $147 million price tag to the state.
State services — including education — are feeling the pinch.
"It's insanity land," Dougherty said. "It's demoralizing to live here and see that education is not a priority. These are our children and these are our neighbors. They need to make some changes."
When the inevitable bust followed, beginning last year, oil prices slid to the $40-per-barrel range, driving up unemployment and forcing several major energy companies to lay off workers. Dwindling revenue collections coupled with a flurry of tax cuts and corporate breaks punched a huge hole in the state's budget.
Besides the drop in per-pupil spending, the Tourism Department hiked fees at some state parks and state buildings fell further into disrepair.
"We didn't create the proper tax structure to protect us from this type of boom-and-bust cycle," said Rep. Scott Inman, D-Del City. "The Republican-led Legislature just randomly cut different taxes thinking we'd benefit from it."
The production of oil has been an integral part of Oklahoma history that predates statehood, and the Sooner State has grown accustomed to the cyclical boom-and-bust nature of the industry. Booms in the 1920s, 1950s and 1980s all were followed by a bust cycle that saw unemployment rise and state revenues shrink.
Some oil states, such as North Dakota, have squirreled away billions of dollars in oil and gas production revenue to help the state prepare for the bust cycle. That state's voter-approved Legacy Fund, which includes 30 percent of taxes from oil and gas production, currently has a balance of $3.3 billion. By comparison, Oklahoma's Rainy Day Fund, which already was used to fill a hole in the current year's budget, now has a balance of about $385 million.
With the ripple effect of low oil prices now leading to dwindling income, sales and energy production tax collections, the state is looking at a potential gap of as much as 10 percent of its $7.1 billion state-appropriated budget last year, possibly more.
Fallin's Secretary of Finance, Preston Doerflinger, agrees the state's fiscal situation is not a pleasant one but said state leaders are managing it appropriately. He also defended the push by Republicans to continue reducing the state's income tax.
"I think it's incumbent upon us to continue to keep taxes as low as possible," Doerflinger said. "I can debate whether it has come at a bad time, but we should be fortunate that people are facing a little less of a tax burden when we're facing what we're facing."
Supporters of reducing Oklahoma's income tax say the cuts make the state more attractive to business and industry and spur economic growth. They point to other cuts over the last decade that were followed by increases in income tax revenue collections.
But Oklahoma's Republican Treasurer Ken Miller, an economist who has long advocated for ensuring that tax cuts are revenue-neutral, chastised his GOP colleagues in the Legislature for creating a fiscal crisis that is "self-inflicted."
"Common sense dictates that until the state proves it can live within its means, it really should stop reducing them, yet some 'thinkers' continue to advocate eliminating the state income tax — even arguing that the state's largest funding source can be vanished without a replacement and still fund needed teacher pay raises," Miller wrote in a recent commentary. "This contention would be laughable if not so devastatingly irresponsible — considering current funding status of core services. But rather than rebuke this nonsense, many in positions of responsibility actually enable it through their silence or rhetoric."
The true depth of Oklahoma's budget hole for the fiscal year that begins on July 1 is not yet known, but early predictions estimate it could range anywhere from $600 million to as much as $1 billion.
While state lawmakers prepare to return to the Capitol in February to write a budget for the upcoming fiscal year, a group of business and education leaders is launching a signature drive to place a 1-cent sales tax on the ballot in November to fund public education. If approved by voters, it would increase Oklahoma's combined state and average local sales tax rate to 9.72 percent, the highest in the nation according to The Tax Foundation, a Washington, D.C.-based think-tank.
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Sunday, October 25, 2015

BCJ: Editorial on taxation and PSB Sales Tax

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Above is from the October 23, 2015 Boone County Journal which is available free of cost at merchants across the county and on-line at:  http://www.boonecountyjournal.com/news/2015/Boone-County-News-10-23-15.pdf#page=1

Friday, May 17, 2013

Playing the IRS card: Six presidents who used the IRS to bash political foes - President Calvin Coolidge (R) - CSMonitor.com

Read a little past history on President Obama’s IRS pickle.

The Obama administration isn't the first to face criticism of using the Internal Revenue Service as a political hit squad. Since the advent of the federal income tax about a century ago, several presidents – or their zealous underlings – have directed the IRS to turn its formidable police powers on political rivals.

As President Coolidge's Treasury secretary, Andrew Mellon ordered an IRS audit of a rival, only to find the Franklin Roosevelt administration, later, doing the same to him. President Nixon was caught on tape ordering IRS field audits of dozens of people deemed to be his political enemies. In other cases, a direct line of accountability to the president is not so clear. But whether directly ordered by a president or not, the IRS field audit has long been an option that gives new meaning to the term "bully pulpit."

Here's how six administrations played the IRS card.

Click on the following for more details:  Playing the IRS card: Six presidents who used the IRS to bash political foes - President Calvin Coolidge (R) - CSMonitor.com

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Illinois tax increase: why lawmakers passed 66 percent income-tax hike

A few comments from a Christian Science Monitor article.

Ralph Martire, executive director of the Center for Tax and budget Accountability, a bipartisan think tank in Chicago. He describes the scope of the tax increases as “transformational.”

But the financial crisis in Illinois is unusual. The state had no choice but to raise taxes, Mr. Martire says: Cutting spending was not a viable option because already, major cutbacks had been made and spending is at a historic low. Then there is the debt: The state already owes $8 billion to vendors, including social service agencies.

A more reasonable measure moving forward, Martire says, would be to overhaul the state’s tax system. He calls it “underperforming and antiquated” for not addressing modern tax growth, leaving out the service sector in its sales tax, and not taxing according to income, which he says hurts lower- to middle-income families.

Click on the following for the complete article:  Illinois tax increase: why lawmakers passed 66 percent income-tax hike - CSMonitor.com

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Politics Northwest | Texas governor uses I-1098 to court Washington business | Seattle Times Newspaper

See what Illinois should look forward if the state income taxes on wealthy increase.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry has sent letters to around 90 top employers and a few business associations in Washington urging companies worried about taxes to head on over to his state.
"As the State of Washington considers a multibillion-dollar tax increase for citizens and businesses ... I invite you to consider your future in America's new land of opportunity: the State of Texas," Perry wrote.

Politics Northwest | Texas governor uses I-1098 to court Washington business | Seattle Times Newspaper

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Thousands rally for tax increase to fix budget - Springfield

 

More than 2,000 people filled the Capitol Wednesday to push lawmakers to approve a spending plan that would spare potential cuts to human-service programs.

The crowd, which ranged from social workers to teachers, urged legislators to pass House Bill 174, which passed the Senate last year but stalled in the House. The legislation would increase the state income tax from 3 percent to 5 percent and would make other changes to bring in billions of dollars in new revenue.

Click on the following for more details:  Thousands rally for tax increase to fix budget - Springfield, IL - The State Journal-Register

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Oregon vote could impact Illinois tax wars, guv election

The Oregon measure — taxes will go up 2% for individuals earning more than $125,000 a year or couples above $250,000 — bears a distinct similarity to a proposal here by Democratic gubernatorial hopeful Dan Hynes.

,Mr. Hynes wants to implement a graduated income tax, one that he says would raise billions of dollars a year solely by zapping the top 3% of the population: households with annual incomes of $200K on up.
The measure needs to be approved by a 60% vote of the General Assembly and then in a statewide referendum.

 Should Mr. Hynes win the Democratic primary next Tuesday, expect to hear a lot, lot, lot more about Oregon and why Illinois ought to follow suit.

Click on the following for the rest of the story: Oregon vote could impact Illinois tax wars, guv election | Greg Hinz | Crain's Chicago Business