The plan
would eliminate all personal and corporate income taxes, plus the corporate
franchise tax (in essence a licensing fee based upon corporate capital that is
perhaps the most unfavorable of all the states that have one), in exchange for
raising the state tax rate 1.88 percent and coverage of that to a host of
previously-exempt services. However, several large exemptions will continue to
exist against the entire state sales tax portion, principally concerning the
acquisition of unprepared food, medicines, and utilities. Plus, any person whose
income falls below $20,000 annually will be able to apply for a rebate of up to
$300, and anyone drawing retirement payments such as Social Security can
get a rebate tied to the first $60,000 of income (currently, recipients and
state and local government retirees do not pay income taxes). Finally, it
raises the tax on tobacco products, by $1.05 per pack of cigarettes.
Evaluated on economic terms,
the plan has much going for it. Over the decades, research results continue to demonstrate
that the most reliable path to increased societal wealth comes through systems
relatively light on income taxes compared to sales taxes (nine states currently
have no income taxes). Empirically, states with the lowest income taxes for
decades have seen the most economic growth, while those with the lowest sales
taxes have seen the least growth.