State needs this
business tax cut
By FRANK KNAPP
JR. Guest
columnist
The State should be congratulated for its recent editorial
recognition that the state income tax on small business profits
should be reduced from 7 percent to 5 percent, the same rate larger
corporations now pay. The editorial stated: “We’re delighted that
the Senate is focusing on the problem of charging home-grown
businesses — the ones that provide the bulk of our jobs — a tax rate
that’s 40 percent higher than the rate large corporations pay.
Eliminating that disparity very well might spur job growth, and it
certainly would make the tax system fairer.”
However, The State’s editorial concludes that the Senate bill,
sponsored by Hugh Leatherman and passed by the Senate with all but
five votes, that corrects the tax disparity problem should not
become law. As president of the S.C. Small Business Chamber of
Commerce, let me take issue with each of the objections raised in
the editorial.
The editorial argues that state government cannot afford the
projected $129 million tax cut targeted toward small businesses
because “the state is not collecting enough money to adequately fund
essential services.”
Proponents of the Senate bill designed the legislation with this
concern in mind. In order to cause the least burden to the state
budget and agency needs while moving forward on tax fairness for
small businesses, the bill phases the tax cut in over four years,
with a first-year fiscal impact of only $32 million. The anticipated
growth in state revenue should easily offset this cost while leaving
additional new money for government services next year and each year
thereafter.
The editorial suggests that the small-business tax cut should not
be enacted unless it is part of an overall review of our entire tax
system. Certainly our tax system is fraught with inequities and
disjointed public policy. And there have been many attempts over the
years to study our state tax code for reform. Unfortunately, all
attempts have failed.
To say that small businesses should not receive tax equity until
an illusive comprehensive tax reform plan becomes reality is simply
to condemn small businesses to forever not receiving the tax relief
nearly everyone believes they deserve.
The editorial worries that the Senate tax cut plan “would reduce
the portion of government services that are funded by businesses —
and increase the portion paid for by individuals.” While this is a
mathematically correct statement and an interesting topic for public
policy wonks, it should be of no concern to individual taxpayers. No
one will pay higher taxes because of this tax cut.
Small businesses are finally close to achieving the level playing
field with big business on state income tax. The General Assembly
should pass the Senate plan for cutting small business income tax.
It’s justified. We can afford it. We should do it now.
Mr. Knapp is president and co-founder of the S.C. Small Business
Chamber of
Commerce. |