Don’t reduce state
income tax without raising other taxes
THE SENATE FINANCE Committee greatly improved the governor’s plan
to cut the income tax, demanding a higher rate of revenue growth
each year before the tax rate could be rolled back, and eliminating
a provision that required the first cut next year.
So at least this revised proposal wouldn’t cause the state to
fall as much farther behind on funding essential services, and might
even give us an opportunity to bring some of those services back up
to a basic level.
But this is still a plan whose time has not come.
Gov. Mark Sanford says cutting the income tax rate is essential
to attracting businesses to the state and encouraging South
Carolinians to start and grow their own businesses. And we have no
doubt that lower taxes would help with all of those things — as long
as lower taxes don’t result in our basic infrastructure crumbling.
But it almost certainly will. Even if lowering the income tax would
eventually generate enough economic activity to make up the
difference in tax revenue, the effect would be delayed. And we’re
not confident that many people want to invest in a state that can’t
educate its children well enough to produce a competent workforce,
that can’t keep its prisons — and therefore its communities — safe
and secure, that can’t patch its potholes and improve dangerous
roads and adequately police those roads.
The idea that South Carolinians are overtaxed is by no means
fact. We pay, on average, a lower percentage of our income in taxes
than people in 40 states; add in fees, and we still pay less than 19
states.
That’s not to say that some taxes aren’t too high. Clearly, some
are. Just as clearly, some are too low.
The way you fix the problem — particularly when you are not
collecting enough money to pay for basic services — is not by
lowering an individual tax. It’s by lowering some taxes while
raising others; in other words, overhauling the tax system.
Such a comprehensive approach also allows for more complicated
changes than simply raising or lowering tax rates. And that might be
what is needed with the income tax, which looks much higher than it
actually is.
While our income tax rate is among the highest in the nation, our
effective tax rate — the percentage of our incomes that we pay in
taxes — ranks somewhere between the middle and the bottom
nationally, depending on how you do the calculations. This is
because we have so many exemptions, credits and deductions. If the
goal is to convince outsiders to take a serious look at South
Carolina rather than simply marking us off the list because we seem
to have such high income taxes, we might be better off eliminating
enough of those exemptions that we can lower the rate, and still
bring in the same amount of money.
This state desperately needs an overhaul of our tax code — and
some sort of change in the income tax should be part of that
overhaul. But it should only be part of it. Until the Legislature is
willing to do the entire job, it needs to stop tinkering around the
edges. That’s a recipe for bad policy that damages our state. |