Title: StateLocal Finance
1State-Local Finance
- DMS(Chapter 10)
- Do Tax Cuts Work? Just Look at the States, by
Stephen Moore and Stephen Slivinski. - http//www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id4374
2Concepts
- Revenues the governments bring in
- Tax burden a measurement of taxes paid (tax
collections / income) - State/Local Tax burdens
3(No Transcript)
4Types of Taxes
- Income tax a tax on income (individuals, firms)
- Sales tax a tax levied on purchases
- Includes excise taxes (sin taxes)
- Property tax a tax levied on property owners
based on the value of their home/property
5Types of Taxes
- Motor vehicle taxes
- Estate taxes (death taxes)
- Gift taxes
-
6Types of Taxes
- Severance taxes taxes on natural resources
severed from the state - Misc. taxes
- Gambling/lottery
- Travel/tourist taxes
- Misc. user fees
7Distribution of State Government Tax Collections
by Source
8Diversity of State Tax Systems
9Criteria for Evaluating Tax Systems
- Equity fairness
- Progressive
- Proportional
- Regressive
- Yield net return
- Elasticity responsiveness to economic
conditions - Ease of administration complexity, evasion
10Criteria for Evaluating Tax Systems
- Political Accountability openness of process
- Acceptability congruence with citizen
preferences
11Sales Taxes
- 80 goes to state governments
- AK, DE, MT, NH, OR no sales tax
- MS, TN and RI highest at 7
12Sales Taxes
- Politically popular
- Poor accountability
- Highly regressive
- Poor elasticity
- Tax base is eroding (declining yield)
13Sales Taxes
14Sales Taxes
- Tennessee (Memphis)
- Residents earning 25,000 or less 1,575, or
6.3 of income for state and local taxes - Residents earning 150,000 or more 9,450, or
5.2 of income for state and local taxes
15Sales Tax
- Tax base is slowly eroding
- Products vs. services (1960 41, 2000 58)
- Expanding the sales tax to services (HI, SD, NM)
- Internet purchasing
- 2003 - 16 billion in lost revenue (NCSL / NGA)
- 1992 Supreme Court ruling (mail order purchases)
- NY 2008 law requiring sales tax collection
16Income Taxes
- Largest source of state revenues
- 7 states no personal income tax at all (AK, FL,
NV, SD, TX, WA, WY) - 2 states tax only certain kinds of income (TN,
NH)
17Income Taxes
- Can be progressive or proportional
18Income Taxes
19Income Taxes
- Can be progressive or proportional
- Politically unpopular
- High yield, highly elastic
- Relatively easy to administer
20Property Taxes
- Almost exclusively a local government tax
- Primary source of local funding for education
- States now contribute a large share too
- Politically unpopular
- Tax revolt (Proposition 13)
- Stable source of revenue
21(No Transcript)
22Economic Consequences of State Tax Systems
- Progressive vs. Regressive Taxes
- State income distribution
- Interstate migration
- State economic growth
23(No Transcript)
24In Class Exercise
- You have just been elected governor of Kentucky.
You have a mandate to create a new tax system for
the state. What would it look like? - List the major taxes you would recommend, and the
corresponding of state revenue each tax would
be responsible for. Provide an overall
justification for your choices.
25In Class Exercise
26State Budgeting
- 1 vs. 2-year cycle
- Governor vs. Legislature
- Balanced Budgets Required in nearly all states
(VT) - Deficit vs. Surplus
- Rainy day funds
27State Spending
28 Total State Spending and Federal Funds Provided
to States, 2004
Over twenty-two percent of state total spending
and over forty-four percent of federalfunds
provided to states were spent on Medicaid.
Total State Spending
Federal Funds Provided to States
Elementary Secondary Education 11.4
Higher Education 10.9
Higher Education 5.6
Public Assistance 3.6
Elementary Secondary Education 21.4
Public Assistance 2.1
Transportation 8.0
Corrections 0.6
Transportation 8.0
Medicaid 22.3
Corrections 3.5
All Other 26.3
Medicaid 44.5
All Other 31.7
Source National Association of State Budget
Officers, 2004 State Expenditure Report.
29State Spending
30State Spending
31State Spending
32(No Transcript)
33(No Transcript)