Jeffrey D. Sadow is an associate professor of political science at Louisiana State University Shreveport. If you're an elected official, political operative or anyone else upset at his views, don't go bothering LSUS or LSU System officials about that because these are his own views solely. This publishes five days weekly with the exception of 7 holidays. Also check out his Louisiana Legislature Log especially during legislative sessions (in "Louisiana Politics Blog Roll" below).
22.11.16
LA public asks for smarter, not bigger, state govt
Efforts at tax simplification and whittling away
roads needs in Louisiana won’t necessarily dissipate if policy-makers won’t use
these as excuses to raise taxes.
About the time the state’s Task Force on
Structural Changes in Budget and Tax Policy released its report
to accomplish its mission, voters turned away a constitutional amendment that
would have implemented a matter related to the panel’s final report: removing
the constitutional protection of corporations to deduct federal taxes paid for
their state tax liability. Companion legislation would have removed the
deduction and refigured marginal corporate tax rates from several brackets
topping out at 8 percent to a flat rate of 6.5 percent.
That attempt echoed the report’s suggestion that
the same happen to the constitutional protection mandating individual
deductibility along the same lines. If the electorate felt uneasy about the
corporate version, that could make the same in the case of individuals dead in
the water, a notion floated by the House Republican leadership.
Perhaps
not, according to Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards. He argued
the defeat came because the amendment’s ballot language didn’t make clear that
the matter applied only to corporations. He further stated that insufficient
publicity occurred asserting that the measure and its companion statutory changes
would have resulted in revenue neutrality.
But neither claim rings true. The actual
ballot language read, “Do you support an amendment to eliminate the
deductibility of federal income taxes paid in computing state corporate income
taxes?” – lacking no clarity that the change would affect only corporations.
And analysis of its and its companions’ fiscal impact – admittedly imprecise
given the expansive dynamics involved – gave a best guess that the combination
would increase tax take by around $20 million annually typically.
While trading tax simplification and greater state
control over its revenue sources might be worth an additional payment of $20
million a year by taxpayers, apparently not enough of them thought that way. And
as the compensatory lowering of rates did not appear on the ballot description,
this explains the defeat of the item: voters saw this as a tax hike on
corporations that would end up passed along to consumers.
Thus, the Edwards Administration muses about a
pipe dream in arguing if it just could “educate the public” these kinds of
swaps would succeed. Voters already were educated on the matter: the amendment
did not signal unambiguous revenue neutrality and they rejected it for that
reason. Any future attempt that does not give the electorate reason to think
the end product would feed state government more tax money also will not pass.
As a result, regarding individuals, lawmakers may try
to dislodge another deduction, over “excess” deductions according to the
federal tax code that also Louisianans may use as a shield against state
individual income taxation. With this break in statute, a bill could change it.
However, this would require a supermajority to repeal, and as the House
leadership has voiced skepticism over the general swapping approach, that also
should falter unless any bill doing such assured legislators of its revenue
neutrality.
The same view should apply to the related issue of
an increase in retail fuel taxes for motorists. The current aggregate 20 cents
a gallon the Edwards
Administration argues should rise by at least half, if not double, in order
to fulfill a transportation wish list that could go as high as an extra $600
million in annual spending, with it asserting that years of “ignoring the truth”
have created a backlog of $13 billion.
Yet the public should regard with caution any such
hike. Over
a quarter of a century ago voters imposed a special 4 cent a gallon tax on
drivers to fund 16 special projects. Two remain unfinished, abandonment of the
pay-as-you-go plan in favor of bonds will continue debt servicing for decades,
and already about a quarter of that comes from the 16 cent general levy that
will total $1 billion over almost 30 years. Meanwhile, the original project costs
have increased over 270 percent.
In short, the Edwards Administration asks roads
users to pay more for past mistakes with no guarantee that these will not
recur. Before it cajoles legislators to provide another supermajority backing
to enable this, it must garner trust that more sensible spending will occur through
pursuing alternatives such as ensuring state fees related to vehicle operation
align with actual service provision costs, meaning more general fund dollars can
go to roads rather than subsidizing operations, and meeting
needs by giving priority to less expensive existing rather than new
construction.
A recognition that the public wants smarter, not
bigger, government can accomplish goals such as these. Deviation from this
course risks nothing at all getting done.
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