Every so often, I get asked why I’m so rigidly opposed to tax hikes in general and so vociferously against the imposition of new taxes in particular.
In part, my hostility is an ideological reflex When pressed, though, I’ll confess that there are situations – in theory – where more taxes might be acceptable.
But there’s a giant gap between theory and reality. In the real world, I can’t think of a single instance in which higher taxes led to a fiscally responsible outcome.
That’s true on the national level. And it’s also true at the state level.
Speaking of which, the Wall Street Journal is – to put it mildly – not very happy at the tax-aholic behavior of Connecticut politicians. Here’s some of what was in a recent editorial.
The Census Bureau says Connecticut was one of six states that lost population in fiscal 2013-2014, and a Gallup poll in the second half of 2013 found that about half of Nutmeg Staters would migrate if they could. Now the Democrats who run the state want to drive the other half out too. That’s the best way to explain the frenzy by Governor Dannel Malloy and the legislature to raise taxes again… Mr. Malloy promised last year during his re-election campaign that he wouldn’t raise taxes, but that’s what he also said in 2010. In 2011 he signed a $2.6 billion tax hike promising that it would eliminate a budget deficit. Having won re-election he’s now back seeking another $650 million in tax hikes. But that’s not enough for the legislature, which has floated $1.5 billion in tax increases. Add a state-wide municipal sales tax that some lawmakers want, and the total could hit $2.1 billion over two years.
In other words, higher taxes in recent years have been used to fund more spending.
And now the politicians are hoping to play the same trick another time.
Apparently they don’t care that they’ve turned the Nutmeg State into a New England version of Illinois.
…the state grew a scant 0.9% in 2013, the last year state data are available. That was tied for tenth worst in the U.S. The state’s average compounded annual growth for the last four years is 0.42%. Slow growth means less tax revenue but spending never slows down. Some “40% of the state budget goes to government employee compensation and benefits, including payroll, state pensions, teacher pensions and current and retiree health care,” says Carol Platt Liebau, president of the Hartford-based Yankee Institute. …The Tax Foundation ranks Connecticut as one of the 10 worst states to do business. The state finished last in Gallup’s Job Creation Index in 2014 and now ties with Rhode Island for the worst job creation in the index since 2008.
What’s particularly discouraging is that Connecticut didn’t even have an income tax twenty-five years ago. But once the politicians got a new source of revenue, it’s been one tax hike after another.
Not too many years ago Connecticut was a tax refuge for New York City workers, but since it imposed an income tax in 1991 the rate has kept climbing, as it always does.
There are a couple of lessons from the disaster in Connecticut.
First and foremost, never give politicians a new source of revenue, which has very important implications for the debate in Washington, DC, about a value-added tax.
Unless, of course, you want to enable a bigger burden of government.
And for the states that don’t already have an income tax, the lesson is very clear. Under no circumstances should you allow your politicians to follow Connecticut on the path to fiscal perfidy.
Yet that’s exactly what may be happening in America’s northwest corner. As reported by the Seattle Times, there’s a plan percolating to create an income tax in the state of Washington. It’s being sold as a revenue swap.
State Treasurer Jim McIntire has a “grand bargain” in mind on tax reform and he wants to bend your ear. …the McIntire plan would institute a 5 percent personal-income tax with some exemptions, eliminate the state property tax and reduce business taxes. The plan would raise billions of dollars… The proposal also would lower the state sales tax to 5.5 percent from 6.5 percent.
But taxpayers should be very suspicious, particularly since politicians are talking about the need for more “investment,” which is a common rhetorical trick used by politicians who want to squander more money.
“It is mathematically impossible for us to sustain an adequate investment in education on a shrinking tax base,” he said.
And when you read the fine print, it turns out that the politicians (and the interest groups in the government bureaucracy) want a lot more additional money from taxpayers.
…the plan would raise $7 billion in state revenue but would lower local levies by $3 billion, for an overall increase of about $4 billion.
Advocates of the new tax would prefer to avoid any discussion of big-picture principles.
“We need to have less of an ideological conversation about this,” he said in a news conference.
And their desire to avoid a philosophical discussion is understandable. After all, the big spenders didn’t fare so well the last time voters had a chance to vote on whether the state should impose an income tax.
Voters may not welcome McIntire’s argument, either. In 2010, a proposed income tax on high earners failed by a nearly 30-point margin.
The voters in Washington were very wise back in 2010, so let’s hope they haven’t lost their skepticism about the revenue plans of politicians over the past few years.
There’s every reason to suspect, after all, that the adoption of an income tax would be just as disastrous for the Evergreen State as it was for the Nutmeg State.
To close, I want to share some great advice that was presented by the always sound Professor Richard Vedder. I was at a conference a few years ago where he was also one of the speakers. Asked to comment on whether the Lone Star State should have an income tax, he threw his hands in the air and cried out with passion that, “Texas should give the Alamo to Osama bin Laden before allowing an income tax.”
So if I’m ever asked to speak in Seattle on fiscal policy, I’m going to steal Richard’s approach and and warn that “The state of Washington should give the Space Needle to North Korea before allowing an income tax.”
I doubt I’ll capture Professor Vedder’s rhetorical flair, but there won’t be any doubt that I’ll be 100-percent serious about the dangers of a state income tax.
And what about my home state of Connecticut?
Well, I don’t know of any big landmarks that they could have traded to avoid an income tax. About the only “good” thing to say is that New York’s tax system is probably even worse.
[…] One should-be-obvious conclusion from this data is that states with no income taxes should not make the mistake of adopting that punitive levy. Unless, of course, they want to repeat Connecticut’s unhappy experience. […]
[…] One should-be-obvious conclusion from this data is that states with no income taxes should not make the mistake of adopting that punitive levy. Unless, of course, they want to repeat Connecticut’s unhappy experience. […]
[…] 13 spots thanks to the imposition of a capital gains tax (the state constitution supposedly bars any taxes on income – and voters last fall overwhelmingly voted against the capital gains tax – but it […]
[…] Especially if you also pushed big tax increases and you routinely try to sabotage your state’s constitutional ban on income taxes. […]
[…] Especially if you also pushed big tax increases and you routinely try to sabotage your state’s constitutional ban on income taxes. […]
[…] In 2010, I was ecstatic that voters in the state of Washington rejected an income tax. […]
[…] Seattle lawmakers tried to impose a similar tax back in 2018 but were thwarted by opposition from private-sector workers and businesses (it’s also unclear whether such a tax would survive a legal challenge since the state’s constitution bars taxes on income). […]
[…] But this is the point where it makes sense to merge today’s map with yesterday’s map. Because Tennessee and Washington don’t impose income taxes, while Louisiana and Arkansas both make that mistake. […]
[…] The constitution of the state of Washington prohibits an income tax, so there’s an ongoing debate whether Seattle’s tax grab – if […]
[…] That might even lead politicians in the state to do something really unfortunate, such as adopting a state income tax. […]
[…] was some good news to share. But Connecticut has been drifting in the wrong direction ever since an income tax was imposed about 30 years […]
[…] income tax in the state of Washington would be particularly misguided. At least if the state hopes to be competitive and not drive away wealth and […]
[…] Less than 30 years ago, the state was reasonably competitive, largely because there was no state income tax. But ever since politicians in Hartford got access to that new source of revenue, the state’s finances have spiraled downward. […]
[…] It goes without saying (but I’ll say it anyhow) that the state of Washington should never, ever, allow a state income […]
[…] down that path, however, is a recipe for a loss of high-value taxpayers and […]
[…] a former Connecticut resident, I’m ashamed that my home state, which used to be a success story with no income tax, has now morphed into a high-tax welfare state that is now increasingly infamous […]
[…] don’t like state income taxes, […]
[…] wonder some major taxpayers are escaping, leaving the city (and state) even more […]
[…] the case of Connecticut, we have a state that has suffered dramatic negative consequences ever since the income tax was imposed back in […]
[…] if you’re guessing that the answer is New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Connecticut, or some other “blue state,” that would be wrong as […]
[…] So the bottom line is that American citizens should think about moving to Florida and Indiana. Especially if they live in Vermont, California, or Connecticut. […]
[…] So the bottom line is that American citizens should think about moving to Florida and Indiana. Especially if they live in Vermont, California, or Connecticut. […]
[…] anybody surprised that Illinois is in last place? The dropping scores for Hawaii, New Jersey, and Connecticut also aren’t […]
[…] I wonder if Yale also “strongly objected” to the various big tax hikes that have savaged the state’s investors, entrepreneurs, and small businesses? Or is their […]
[…] I wonder if Yale also “strongly objected” to the various big tax hikes that have savaged the state’s investors, entrepreneurs, and small businesses? Or is their […]
[…] Jersey and the results are similarly dismal. Let’s hope other states, especially Alaska and Washington, are paying […]
[…] of the folks in the Pacific Northwest since some of the big spenders in the state of Washington are advocating for that levy. And add Wyoming and Alaska to that list since politicians in those states over-spent when energy […]
[…] as the horrible consequences of adopting an income […]
[…] The State of Washington Should Learn a Very Important Lesson from Connecticut about the Dangers of a… […]
several years ago I sold a house to an elderly couple from Connecticut… their house in their home state was older… it was nice… in a good area… they had lived in the state for years… raised their family there…
and the reason they moved to my state? on a fixed income… they could no longer afford to pay their property taxes…
High taxes directly affect the cost of goods and services created within each state. While state taxes are less of a factor than federal taxes and mandates, they become part of the overhead bundle.
You can see this by stripping away all taxes and see what happens to a product that costs $1.00 in net salaries, net costs, and net profits. If the accumulated tax rate is 25%, the cost of the product must be $1.33. However, if the accumulated tax rate is 50%, like some areas in the Eurozone, the cost must be $2.00.
The assumption made by those raising taxes is that prices will remain fixed and greedy profiteers will take the hit, but people work and corporations exist only when there is reasonable compensation for their efforts. When prices rise the products of high tax states lose any competitive edge, and people within the state must reduce the units they purchase to stay within budgets. Connexit anyone?
Voting does have consequences doesn’t it? If half of the people in Connecticut want to leave the state due to taxation, why are they failing to vote for those that will eliminate taxes and politicians that favor them?
Thou shall not steal. No exemption for majority vote. The U.S. had no income tax before 1913 and we became an extraordinarily might nation. We are now a nation of thieves. This cannot end well.