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Garrett Martin and Joel Johnson 1/28/2015

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1 Garrett Martin and Joel Johnson 1/28/2015
Governor LePage’s Tax Plan: Background Briefing Garrett Martin and Joel Johnson 1/28/2015

2 Summary Budget Impacts
The Governor’s plan is fundamentally a tax swap: income tax cuts for sales tax increases where the majority of the net benefits – in dollar terms – will flow to high-income households. The Governor’s proposal “locks in” historically low levels of state revenue, crippling Maine’s ability to invest in education, health care, and local communities.

3 Sources of General Fund Revenue, 2007-2019
Pre-LePage Plan Revenue Sources of General Fund Revenue, Income Tax Sales and Use Tax Corporate Income Tax Estate Tax

4 Sources of General Fund Revenue, 2007-2019
Pre-LePage Plan Revenue Sources of General Fund Revenue, Without 2011 Tax Cuts Income Tax Sales and Use Tax Corporate Income Tax Estate Tax

5 Sources of General Fund Revenue, 2007-2019
The LePage Plan Tax Swap Sources of General Fund Revenue, Without 2011 Tax Cuts Income Tax Sales and Use Tax Federal = 38% Individual Income Tax = 22% Sales Tax = 14% Other Revenue = 26% Corporate Income Tax Estate Tax

6 Sources of General Fund Revenue, 2007-2019
The LePage Plan Tax Swap Sources of General Fund Revenue, Without 2011 Tax Cuts Income Tax Sales and Use Tax Corporate Income Tax Estate Tax

7 Tax Cuts $690M $424M Tax Hikes Income Taxes -$610 Million
Estate Taxes -$37 Million Corporate Taxes -$30 Million Other -$13 Million Tax Cuts $690M Tax Hikes $424M Sales and Use Taxes Expansion +$128 Million Rate Increase +$276 Million Other + $20 Million

8 Tax Cuts Tax Hikes $424 Million $690 Million

9 Tax Hikes + Property Tax Increases + Spending Cuts
Tax Cuts $266M $690M $424M

10 General Fund + Revenue Sharing as a share of the economy
State Funding as a Share of the Economy is Already at Historic Lows General Fund + Revenue Sharing as a share of the economy

11 General Fund + Revenue Sharing as a share of the economy
State Funding as a Share of the Economy is at Historic Lows and Going Lower General Fund + Revenue Sharing as a share of the economy

12 Property and Sales Taxes Hit Low- and Middle-Income Mainers Hardest
10% 17% 23% 42% 32% 20% 63% 47% 45% Bottom 20% Middle 20% Top 1% Source: Maine Revenue Services Tax Incidence Study, 2009

13 I WIN!!! Hmmm… I may come out ahead too?!

14 Summary Budget Impacts
The Governor’s plan is fundamentally a tax swap: income tax cuts for sales tax increases where the majority of the net benefits – in dollar terms – will flow to high-income households. The Governor’s proposal “locks in” historically low levels of state revenue, crippling Maine’s ability to invest in education, health care, and local communities.


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