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Funding City Services

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Understanding Taxes – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Funding City Services


1
Funding City Services
  • Understanding Taxes

2
Purposes for Government
  • A primary reason to organize ourselves as cities
    is to foster a sense of community and belonging
  • Most goals around which we form governments are
    to provide benefits that are difficult to achieve
    as individuals or through private businesses
  • Who would build our roads, raise our armies, or
    provide our parks if we did not collectively do
    it?
  • It is important to assure that government
    activities add to the greater public good and are
    balanced to serve major needs of all segments of
    society within our ability to pay

3
Municipal Services
  • Municipalities rarely engage in some activities,
    such as welfare, education, and building
    highways, because they are the responsibility of
    other entities.
  • Towns and cities provide many of the remaining
    services, including most of the services that
    directly affect our daily lives.
  • Public Safety
  • Police
  • Fire
  • Ambulance
  • Water, sewer, trash
  • Streets, sidewalks
  • Parks and recreation
  • Libraries, culture
  • City planning
  • Economic development

4
The Average Utah Household Pays About 600 in
Municipal Taxes Annually
5
Taxes
  • We HAVE to pay for government services, and we
    mostly do so through taxes
  • We pay taxes whether or not we want/use the
    services they fund
  • The degree to which we think government ought to
    provide more/fewer services is a primary reason
    for voter choices
  • Cities can bond (borrow) to pay for
    infrastructure improvements, but must budget
    repayment, and must have a balanced budget

6
Taxes
  • Only the federal government can spend more than
    it collects in taxes, creating debt that must be
    paid by future citizens
  • The national debt is now about 11,308,127,000,000
    each US citizen owes about 37,000
  • This figure is up 10 in just the last 6 months,
    and is scheduled to rise by another 15-20 with
    planned federal stimulus expenditures this year

11,308,127,000,000
7
The Price of Local Government Average for Utah
Cities
8
Price of Local Government Average for State
Plus Cities
9
Price of Municipal Government by State for the
Western Region
10
Price of State Government for the Western
Region
11
Comparing Government Across Locals
  • Be careful about making comparisons
  • Circumstances differ across locals
  • The primary reason Utah has somewhat higher state
    taxes is a much larger than average birth rate.
    Aside from much higher than average costs for
    public education, Utah governmental costs are
    below average. In fact, our per-student
    expenditures are among the lowest in the nation.
  • Differences also arise because of choices about
    adequacy, affordability, and competitiveness.
  • Cities try to provide what their citizens want
    and are willing to pay for

12
Where Does Your Tax Dollar Go?Utah Averages
13
Common Tax Misconception
  • The rich dont pay much in taxes
  • Fact The top-earning 25 of taxpayers (AGI over
    64,702) earned 68.2 of the nation's income, but
    paid 86.3 of federal income tax. The top 1 of
    taxpayers (AGI over 388,806) earned
    approximately 22.1 of the nation's income, yet
    paid 39.9 of federal income taxes. That means
    the top 1 of tax returns paid about the same
    amount of federal individual income taxes as the
    bottom 95 of tax returns. In contrast, the
    bottom 50 of all taxpayers averaged 450 tax per
    person (many of these dont pay any).

14
Common Utah Tax Misconceptions
  • Fallacy 24 of surveyed citizens believe cities
    receive income tax revenue
  • Fact Cities dont collect income tax in Utah
    all state income tax goes to public education
  • Fallacy 40 believe the state receives property
    tax revenue
  • Fact Depending upon the locale, about 55 of
    this tax goes to the local school district, 20
    to the county, 15 to city

15
Your Tax Responsibility
  • Typical adults pay about 25 - 40 of their
    income into taxes of all types, depending on
    their income
  • Because income taxes are highly progressive, your
    burden for this type of tax depends on your
    income
  • Lower income people pay very little (or no)
    Federal Income Tax
  • This means that when candidates talk on and on
    about tax breaks for the poor, they arent saying
    muchIn fact, sometimes what they really mean is
    wealth redistribution (tax the rich more to give
    to poor through government programs)

16
Average Tax Burden
  • In 2008, average Americans worked 74 days to pay
    their federal taxes and 39 more days to pay state
    and local taxes.
  • Careful about averageremember that lower
    income persons might pay off their entire federal
    income tax in 1 week of work or less
  • This means that an average American taxpayer pays
    31 of annual income for all forms of taxation
  • Utah places about 20th among the states for tax
    burden (due to lots of kids and costs of
    educating themwithout the extra burden of
    education, the ranking would be much lower)

17
Most Common Forms of Taxation
  • Federal and state income tax
  • Usually regarded as most progressive (rich pay
    more)
  • Ad valorem taxes (sales tax, tariffs,
    inheritance)
  • Sales tax is usually regarded as most regressive
    (rich pay more because they buy more, but poor
    pay proportionally more of their income)
  • Entitlements taxes (Social Security, Medicare)
  • Property tax
  • Corporate and excise taxes
  • Often regarded as hidden taxes because the
    entities taxed pass on the cost to the consumer

18
Federal Income TaxIts Actually Pretty Low Right
Now
In recent years, the rate is starting to rise
back up
19
We Love to Complain About Taxes
  • In fact, the federal tax for most people was
    recently at its lowest rate in decades, although
    creeping back up in the last few years

20
A little over half of debt is for past defense
spending
Note Remember that this is just income tax.
The Federal budget includes other sources of
income spent elsewhere, most notably Social
Security and Medicare
21
Average Household Tax BurdenFor a Typical
Household Income of 40,000
22
Typical Tax BurdenBased on family of five,
income of 62,677
Type of Tax Tax Fed. State Schl. Cnty City
Social security 7155 45 7155 0 0 0 0
Medicare 1673 11 1673 0 0 0 0
Employment taxes 553 3.5 553 0 0 0 0
Excise taxes 281 1.8 281 0 0 0 0
Federal income taxes 230 1.4 230 0 0 0 0
State income taxes 1831 11.5 0 0 1831 0 0
Sales taxes 1805 11.4 0 1301 0 224 280
Property taxes 1437 9.1 0 0 799 431 216
Auto taxes (gas) 913 5.8 401 347 0 83 83
Total 15878 100 10293 1648 2620 738 579
of total tax 65 10 16 5 4
For this family, taxes represent about 25 of
total income
23
The Federal Budget May Be in Trouble
  • Whereas Federal tax rates are pretty stable,
    spending is growing rapidly
  • Entitlement programs are unsustainable without
    major tax increases
  • Huge debt will hamper our ability to solve our
    problems
  • Fortunately, our state and local governments are
    in much better shape, mostly because of cost
    containment and avoidance of entitlements

24
2007 Federal BudgetExpenditures Revenues
(deficit of 162 billion will be in the
trillions for 2009)
25
Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid as of
Federal Budget
26
Mandatory Spending is Consuming a Growing Share
of the Federal Budget
27
Change in Composition of Discretionary Spending
28
An Aging Population
  • American are living longer and having fewer
    children
  • Thus, fewer workers are available to support each
    Social Security recipient

29
Health Care Costs are Rising Much Faster than the
Economy
30
Economic Trends that Challenge Municipal Taxation
Sources
  • Our high birth rate and increasing longevity mean
    increased reliance on wage earners to support the
    young and old
  • Our movement towards a service-based economy
    means a growing proportion of our economy is
    exempt from municipal taxation
  • E-commerce generates no municipal taxation, and
    other technology reduces the need for real
    property (e.g., factories)

31
Utah Tax Trends Comparing across Two Years
  • 1985
  • 2.5 billion total State budget
  • 714 million total municipal revenue (1990)
  • 7.7 of state budget dedicated to Medicaid
  • 144 million state Medicaid expenditures
  • Income tax burden 25 per 1,000 of personal
    income
  • Property tax burden 36 per 1,000 of personal
    income
  • Sales tax burden 39 per 1,000 of personal
    income
  • 2005
  • 9 billion total State budget
  • 1.4 billion total municipal revenue (2004)
  • 18 of state budget dedicated to Medicaid
  • 1.6 billion State Medicaid expenditures
  • Income tax burden 32 per 1,000 of personal
    income
  • Property tax burden 25 per 1,000 of personal
    income
  • Sales tax burden 35 per 1,000 of personal
    income

32
Municipal Summary
  • Although federal budgets face extreme challenges,
    municipal budgets have been relatively stable
  • However, the status quo is threatened for
    municipalities because (a) they have limited
    control over their own ability to maintain
    current taxation levels and (b) other government
    entities have overcommitted or postponed meeting
    their needs
  • In the last major tax overhaul (over 30 years
    ago), Utah developed a municipal tax structure
    where property taxes would mostly pay for all
    operating expenses and sales/use taxes would pay
    for capital improvements.

33
Five Principles of Sound Tax Policy
  1. Simple clear and easy to administer
  2. Fair depends heavily on ones perspective
  3. Efficient generates adequate revenue with low
    administrative cost
  4. Stable predictable revenue
  5. Transparent open to citizens with rational ties
    to services provided

34
Surveys of Utah Citizens
Fact In Utah, property taxes are a major source
of funding for counties, cities, and schools only.
35
Surveys of Utah Citizens
36
Utahs Property Tax Burden
37
Understanding Property Tax
  • The county places a valuation on real property
    (homes, business, land)
  • The taxing entities (cities, counties, schools)
    set a tax rate
  • The tax is calculated by multiplying the assessed
    value by the tax rate (reduced by 45 for homes)
  • Lindons tax rate is currently .001296
  • A home valued at 300,000 would have city
    property tax of 214
  • In Lindon, about 13 of your property tax is for
    the city, 72 for the school district, and 15
    for the county

38
Understanding Property Tax
  • An increase in the assessed value of a home does
    not mean property tax goes up
  • As assessed values go up, the tax rate goes down
    so that the same dollar amount of tax is assessed
  • A taxing entity must hold a Truth in Taxation
    hearing to adjust the tax rate
  • Because of inflation, the value of property taxes
    collected will steadily decline unless to taxing
    entity holds a hearing and raises the tax rate.
  • Lindon has not increased the tax rate for as long
    as we have records, so homeowners now have a much
    lower tax rate than they did years ago

39
Understanding Property Tax
  • As compared to other cities in Utah County,
    Lindons property tax rate is one of the lowest
  • Over just the last 10 years, the contribution of
    property tax to Lindons revenue has declined
    from 38 in 1998 to just 18 in 2007
  • Over time, the most stable source of municipal
    revenue will decline unless the city acts
  • Contrary to the intent of the state tax plan for
    municipalities, Lindon must now heavily subsidize
    its general operations from the sales tax

40
Lindons Property Tax Rate1988 to 2008
41
Lindon Tax Revenues, 1998 v. 2008
42
Property Taxes Failing to Keep Up with Rising
Population
43
Utahs Sales Tax Burden
Utahs ranking is now higher due to recent
reduction in our tax on food and tax increases in
other states
44
Sales Tax in Lindon
  • The sales tax in Lindon is 6.75
  • 1 of this, goes to cities, 4.7 goes to the
    state, .25 goes to the county, and the rest goes
    to county transportation funds
  • The 1 city portion is allocated in two ways
  • Half goes to the city where the tax was generated
  • Half goes into a general fund that is distributed
    to all cities in the state based on population
  • Because of this distribution formula, only about
    60 of the municipal portion sales taxes
    generated in Lindon comes back to Lindon City

45
A Balanced Municipal Tax Portfolio
  • The recent economic downturn exposes the folly of
    becoming too dependent on sales tax from a period
    of economic boom
  • For the first quarter of 2009, Utahs sales tax
    is down over 11, 8th worst in the nation
  • Lindons sales tax decline is a bit worse than
    this state average
  • Good tax policy includes a variety of revenue
    sources, including the stability of property
    taxes and the growth ability of sales taxes

46
Lindon City Budget
  • For more information
  • Attend Lindon City budget hearings held each
    June,
  • Request budget information from out City
    Treasurer, or
  • Look for detailed budget information to appear
    on-line soon
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