Governor’s cut bad
for taxation, economics
By LACY
FORD Guest
columnist
Gov. Mark Sanford’s proposal to gradually cut the state’s top
income tax rate by nearly one-third (from 7 percent to 4.74 percent)
not only threatens to undermine South Carolina’s efforts to build an
education system capable of meeting the new economy’s demand for
knowledge and skills, but also represents flawed tax policy and a
misguided approach to economic development.
Rather than create jobs and generate investment in South
Carolina, this wrongheaded tax-cut proposal writes a prescription
for long-term economic stagnation and inadequate education.
The most important reason the Legislature should reject it is the
long-term damage it would inflict on the state’s struggle to build a
high-wage, high-salary, knowledge-based economy. Flying in the face
of two impressive reports insisting that the road to enhanced
economic competitiveness is not paved with low wages or low taxes
but with higher levels of education and enhanced job skills, the
governor is recommending a plan that would ultimately cost the state
nearly $1 billion in annual revenue.
Under the proposed cut, South Carolina’s public schools, along
with its colleges, universities and technical schools, would
continue to face chronic and worsening funding problems. Yet these
are the institutions best-positioned to transmit and create the
knowledge and skills that lie at the heart of the high-wage
economy.
Moreover, no compelling evidence indicates that South Carolina’s
current levels of taxation place it at a competitive disadvantage.
Indeed, by all objective measures, South Carolinians pay much lower
taxes than most other Americans. A 2004 study of combined state and
local tax burdens in the United States by the nonpartisan Tax
Foundation revealed that South Carolina had the seventh-lowest state
and local tax burden (9 percent of total income) in the nation last
year. Taxpayers in 43 states paid a higher percentage of their
incomes in state and local taxes. Additionally, South Carolina’s
total tax burden remained substantially lower than those of Georgia
and North Carolina.
There is a litany of reasons why the proposed cuts in income tax
rates represent bad tax policy. First, the proposed change would
make the state’s tax system significantly more regressive,
increasing unfairness in a system already in need of a major
overhaul. State economist Bill Gillespie has estimated that the
richest 1.7 percent of taxpayers would receive nearly 25 percent of
the proposed cuts, while 50 percent of all taxpayers would receive
virtually no benefit.
Additionally, the lowering of income tax rates would disrupt the
healthy balance in the state tax base, inevitably shifting the tax
burden toward the sales and property taxes. While hardly progressive
as currently structured, the state income tax is the least
regressive tax relied on by the state.
The sales tax, currently the workhorse of state and local
governments, hits lower- and middle-income families much harder than
the well-to-do. Local property taxes, the most-criticized tax in the
state, are a special hardship for low- and fixed-income property
owners. Lowering income tax rates would inevitably increase the
state’s overall reliance on these more regressive taxes.
Also, the proposed income tax cut would take substantially more
money out of the state treasury than it would return to taxpayer
wallets. Because state income taxes are deductible on federal
returns, lower state tax rates would lead higher-income taxpayers to
pay more in federal taxes. This loss of the federal deduction would
siphon off 20 percent to 25 percent of the lost state revenue to the
federal government as a result of the rate cut.
Finally, the argument that the proposed tax cut would enhance
economic development efforts in South Carolina looks unpersuasive
when examined carefully. After paying increased federal taxes,
Palmetto taxpayers could either spend or invest the remaining money,
but there is no guarantee (or even incentive) for them to do either
in South Carolina. Investments, in particular, are normally made in
active and fluid national and international capital markets, and
nothing about the income tax cut earmarks money for investment in
the Palmetto State.
Using tax incentives to promote economic development is a
time-tested strategy, one generally well-used by South Carolina
since the 1950s. But historically, these tax incentives have been
targeted specifically to businesses that invest capital and create
jobs in South Carolina. These focused tax-incentive packages
doubtless need refinement in light of the new economy, but they
represent laser-like sharpness compared with the unproven
scatter-gun approach of the governor’s plan.
It is imperative that South Carolinians interested in the state’s
long-term progress and prosperity work together to make sure this
shortsighted measure does not become law.
Dr. Ford is a professor of history at the University of South
Carolina specializing in the political and economic history of the
American South and twice a National Endowment for the Humanities
Research
Fellow. |