EDITORIAL
Sanford Tax Plan
Cruel as Written Poor families would
shore up S.C. tax base to allow tax cuts for the
prosperous
Let's put aside, for now, the question of whether state
government can afford to devote some of its meager tax base to Gov.
Mark Sanford's coveted state-income-tax cut. More pressing in the
near term is another question: Why he would advocate a state tax
base reduction that gives wealthier state taxpayers proportionally
larger tax breaks than the breaks accorded to lower-income
residents.
The question is pertinent not only because a subcommittee of the
S.C. House Ways and Means committee last week approved Sanford's
proposal, which failed last year in the S.C. Senate. Also last week,
the House upheld Sanford's recent veto of the 2004 bill that would
have capped property-tax increases on high-end residential property,
thereby shifting the property-tax burden to all other classes of
taxable-property owners.
The governor clearly understands that ability to pay is the
bedrock principle of any fair state-taxation plan. If he didn't get
it on ability to pay, he would have allowed the property-tax cap to
become law. Yet the equally pernicious income-tax cut, first
proposed during his 2002 campaign for governor, remains his top
legislative priority.
His plan, readers will recall, would phase down the state's top
marginal income-tax rate from the current 7 percent to 4.75 percent,
in years when the state runs a surplus. But the Sanford plan does
not address the S.C. income tax's greatest travesty - that the state
applies its highest marginal rate to South Carolinians with taxable
income greater than $12,650. That's only $160 above the current
federal poverty line for a two-person household.
It's no surprise, then, that according to the S.C. Board of
Economic Advisers, 25 percent of the savings from the Sanford plan
would go to the wealthiest 1.7 percent of South Carolinians - those
making more than $200,000 a year. A family of four at the poverty
line, $18,850, in grim contrast, would get a tax break of $139.50 -
while still paying 294.50 in state income tax.
The Republican argument in support of such tax-break
regressivism: If the state gives wealthier South Carolinians the
biggest tax breaks, they, in turn, would reinvest it in the state's
economy, lifting wealth levels for everyone in time.
Maybe, maybe not. Regardless, we have no problem with letting
friends and neighbors who are more successful keep more of their
discretionary income.
But why won't Sanford and legislative Republicans also consider
significantly reducing - or eliminating - the income-tax burden for
poor South Carolinians? That proverbial S.C. family of four at the
poverty line could buy a lot of groceries or clothes for the kids
with the $434 per year that the state takes from them now, at the 7
percent tax rate.
The dirty little secret behind the Sanford income-tax-cut:
Exempting poor families in this fashion while also putting megabucks
back into the pockets of the prosperous would give away too
much of the S.C. tax base. When you tap poor families for a few
hundred here, a few hundred there, pretty soon you're talking real
money. South Carolina has many, many poor families.
As written, this plan is unfair, even cruel. The Ways and Means
Committee, which takes up the matter this week, should revise it to
give poor families significant state-income-tax relief - or refuse
to pass
it. |