Final tax mod slides 12 09-12
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Transcript of Final tax mod slides 12 09-12
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Tax Reform
The Path to Economic Growth
and Fiscal Stability in North Carolina
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NC’s Economy is Large• Population of 9.55 million (10th)• Workforce of 4,500,000 • GSP of $407 Billion (10th) • Larger than GA, MI, MA since
2003• NC = 24th largest national
economy
But large is hard to affect
Slide 2
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Despite being one of the “Best Business Climates” in the U.S. during the last decade according to Site Selection Magazine & other publications, in NC: Job creation is not keeping up with workforce growth Job growth, unemployment, & poverty is worse than
the U.S. average From 1990 to 2000, we were 11th in U.S.
wage and income growth; In 2009, North Carolina was 45th
In 2010, we were 48th
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A Surprising Statistic
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Economic Success---and Failure
75
77
79
81
83
85
87
89
91
93
95
1969: 79.14
1973: 83.14
1982: 81.44
1989: 89.08
1997: 92.88
2009: 87.62
NC Per Capita Income as % of US Average
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2010: 87.5
UNC Center for Competitive Economies
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We are Losing Ground on Per Capita Income In North Carolina
• We are falling further behind the U.S. average in per capita income in North Carolina
• Our average per capita income as a percentage of the U.S. average has decreased every year from 1997 to 2010 to where we were in 1986
• If current trends continue, NC’s average per capita income as a percentage of the U.S. average is on track to drop to 1970 levels by 2020
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Median Household Income North Carolina
• North Carolina's median household income has fallen from $51,125 in 2000 to $45,570 in 2010, a decline of 10.9 percent.
• Half of households in the state have incomes above the median, and half below, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
All figures are in 2010 dollars
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NORTH CAROLINA MEDIAN HOUSEHOLD INCOME
Source: U.S. Census Bureau
10.9 % DECLINE FROM 2000
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FY 03-04 FY 04-05 FY 05-06 FY 06-07 FY 07-08 FY 08-09 FY 09-10$0
$1,000,000,000
$2,000,000,000
$3,000,000,000
$4,000,000,000
$5,000,000,000
$6,000,000,000
$7,000,000,000
$203,437,950 $378,340,914
$1,616,170,002
$2,917,405,768
$4,180,679,410
$5,402,783,885
$6,725,966,540
NC Economic Development Spending (Cumulative)
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Slide 9
NC Job Creation Performance 2000-2010
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1970 1980 1990 2000 2010
Manufacturing 35.2% 32.7% 25.5% 18.8% 10.8%
Government (incl. Military) 21.1% 19.6% 18.5% 18.1% 21.1%
Trade, Transportation and Utilities 18.5% 18.1% 19.6% 18.7% 17.8%
Services 14.9% 19.2% 25.2% 32.0% 39.1%
Financial Activities & Information 5.4% 5.5% 5.8% 6.5% 6.7%
Construction, Agriculture & Mining 5.0% 4.9% 5.4% 5.9% 4.5%
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SALES TAX ISSUES
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Shrinking Sales Tax Base
Increasing Sales Tax Rates in North Carolina
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The Sales Tax Base• The tax base has narrowed
The bar graphs below indicate how North Carolinians spend $100 of their income as a % of items subject to sales tax
We spend a smaller % of our income on items subject to sales tax now than in the 1970’s & more on services not subject to sales tax
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Sales Tax Base Erosion
11/27/2012 13
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The Sales Tax Base
0.0%
0.5%
1.0%
1.5%
2.0%
2.5%
3.0%
1970-71 1974-75 1978-79 1982-83 1986-87 1990-91 1994-95 1998-99 2002-03 2006-07
Effective Tax Rate Average
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The effective tax rate (collections/income) has been relatively stable despite a declining tax base. But how was this achieved?
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The Sales Tax Base
56.1%52.7%
46.2%
36.8%
0.0%
0.5%
1.0%
1.5%
2.0%
2.5%
3.0%
3.5%
4.0%
4.5%
5.0%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s
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But in order to keep up with a declining tax base, State tax rates were increased from 3% to 5.75% since 1991, allowing the effective tax rate to remain comparatively steady.
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State Tax Structure
FY 1970-71 FY 2011-2012
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INCOME TAX ISSUES
Unstable Income Tax
Base
Increasing Tax Rates in
North Carolina
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?Growth & Stability?
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20% of General Fund revenue comes from these two volatile sources.
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• FY 1990-1991– 8.1% shortfall– $600 million expenditure
cuts– $600 million tax increase
• FY 2001-02, 2005-06– 10.8% shortfall– Temporary sales tax
increase– Temporary income tax
increase
• FY 2008-09– 15.2% shortfall– Increase ‘sin’ taxes– Temporary sales &
income tax increase
• Next Recession?– The tax structure has not
changed– History suggests another
Recession & shortfall– Could it be worse? 20% or
25%
NC Revenue Insufficiency
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What Are Other States Doing?• States with current plans to eliminate or significantly
reduce their income taxes include: South Carolina, Oklahoma, Kansas, Indiana, Nebraska, Idaho, Maine, New Jersey, Ohio• “States like New York, California, Illinois and
Maryland that have high and rising tax rates also tend to be those that have growing welfare states, heavy regulation, dominant public unions, and budgets that are subject to boom and bust because they rely so heavily on a relatively few rich taxpayers.” From Wall Street Journal article “The Heartland Tax Rebellion”---2/7/12 20
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From the Wall Street Journal--2/7/12
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How Do We Move North Carolina Forward?
Make North Carolina’s Economy more competitive
Promote income growth & wealth generation
Grow the State GDP
Ensure revenue stability
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Cornerstones for Developing Stable Economic Growth in North Carolina
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Education
Transportation
EnergyRegulatory Reform
Tax Reform
NC. CompetitiveEconomy
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Tax Policy Long-Term Goal
• A competitive NC Economy that will:–Promote Economic Growth–Create Jobs
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Tax Policy Objectives
• Develop a transparent and simple tax code• Ensure a less volatile revenue stream to plan &
operate government efficiently at a revenue neutral level
• Improve a declining Sales & Use tax base• Generate income, wealth & GDP growth• Reward entrepreneurship and innovation• Promote a competitive small business
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NC’s Current Business Taxes
• Corporate income and franchise tax• Personal income tax • Sales or privilege tax on business purchases• Local privilege and gross receipts taxes• Gross premiums tax (insurance companies)• Excise tax on real estate transfers• Local property taxes• Estate tax
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How Do We Fix the NC Tax Code?
• Think about your own business and how NC’s tax code impacts your decisions
• If you were writing a new tax code for a new state, what would it look like?
• What if current tax code were replaced with fewer & simpler tax types?
• A tax code that is less complex, more equitable, generates wealth and income growth, and grows the State GDP
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Tax Reform Considerations
• Tax Reform requires a long-term, structural solution
• The Status Quo is no longer an option—our current tax code is outdated
• Using the same antiquated tax policy while expecting different results is the definition of Tax Insanity
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DISCUSSION &
COMMENTS
29Thanks to Brent Lane & Barry Boardman for providing graphs and statistics for this presentation