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"Making Texas Competitive" State Senator Eliot Shapleigh January 11, 2006 Texas Tax Reform Commission ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005.

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Presentation on theme: ""Making Texas Competitive" State Senator Eliot Shapleigh January 11, 2006 Texas Tax Reform Commission ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005."— Presentation transcript:

1 "Making Texas Competitive" State Senator Eliot Shapleigh January 11, 2006 Texas Tax Reform Commission ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005

2 What Will Make Texas Competitive? "Don't tax us, or we can't compete with the lawyers in New York." – Ron Kirk, January 9, 2006 "Cut our taxes and we create jobs." – Ronald Reagan, 1984 "Don't tax me, don't tax thee, tax the fella behind the tree." – Russell Long, 1944

3 Why Are Texas' Sales and Property Taxes So High? (relative sources of revenue) SOURCE: CQ’s State Fact Finder 2004 ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005

4 Principles for a Good Revenue System Raises enough money Everyone pays fair share Enhances state and local economic development Avoids over-reliance on any one tax or set of taxes Minimal compliance and enforcement costs for simplicity Withstands shifts in the economy and promotes certainty for taxpayers and government Broad based, even- handed treatment of all tax payers so as to keep tax rates low Billy Hamilton, “What is a ‘Good’ Tax System, “ Select Committee on Tax Equity, Rethinking Texas Taxes, Volume 2 Analysis of the Tax System (Austin, January 1989) ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005

5 The Property Tax: The First Leg of a Three Legged Stool ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005

6 2002 Property Taxes (per capita) Rank State In Dollars 1New Jersey$1,868 2Connecticut 1,733 3New Hampshire 1,701 4Maine 1,477 5New York 1,400 6Wyoming 1,388 7Rhode Island 1,367 8Massachusetts 1,357 9Vermont 1,336 10Alaska 1,289 11Illinois 1,260 12Wisconsin 1,188 13 Texas $1,126 SOURCE: CQ State Fact Finder 2005 ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005

7 The Property Tax is a Regressive Tax Source: Tax Exemptions & Tax Incidence, 2005; Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005

8 The Sales Tax: The Second Leg of a Three Legged Stool ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005

9 Sales Tax Rates in the Ten Biggest States State Tax Guide: Commerce Clearing House, Inc.; Federation of Tax Administrators, January, 2004. ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005

10 Sales Taxes Are Even More Regressive Note: Percentages include sales, gas, and motor vehicle tax ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005 Source: Tax Exemptions & Tax Incidence, 2005; Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts

11 11 What Does the Average Texas Family Pay in Taxes?* Sales Taxes$1917 (General, motor vehicle, gasoline) 1 Property Taxes$1455 *Average Income = $50,643 1 General = $1,416, Gas = $261, Motor Vehicle = $240 The Average Texas Family Pays 32% More in Sales Taxes than Property Taxes ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005 Source: Tax Exemptions & Tax Incidence, 2005; Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts

12 Texas' Tax System Is Very Regressive ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005 Source: Tax Exemptions & Tax Incidence, 2005; Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts

13 Income: $530 Sales: $1,250 Property: $408 Total: $2,188 Income: $0 Sales: $1,315 Property: $1,126 Total: $2,441 Difference = $253 less in New Mexico Source: U.S. Census; based on 2002 per capita numbers Most Tax Sensitive Corner of Texas

14 How Would a State Income Tax Work? The Texas Constitution requires that (1) an income tax rate has to be approved by the vote of the people; (2) 2/3rds of income tax revenue is dedicated to property tax relief; (3) the remaining net revenues are dedicated to education; and (4) Any increase to the rate also has to be approved by a majority of the voters. Art. 8, Sec. 24 ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005

15 What Additional Revenue Would a State Income Tax Produce? SOURCE: Figures calculated by the Citizens for Tax Justice using the Kansas income tax rate *All numbers are biennial $34.6 Billion Total Revenue $23.1 Billion Reduces Property Taxes by 90% $11.5 Billion for Education ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005

16 How Much More a Month Are Our Kids Worth to Improve Education? ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005

17 Do you favor or oppose a statewide education flat tax on income dedicated to public education which is deductible from federal income taxes? March 29-April 5, 2004 ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005

18 9 in 10 Texans Get a Tax Hike, Pay More and Get Less SOURCE: Legislative Budget Board, Tax Equity Note, H.B. 3, 79th First Called Session

19 The Wealthy are Paying Less and Getting More From 1979 to 2002: Source: Congressional Budget Office, 2005 Effects of 2001-2003 tax cuts: Income levelIncome increase (%) Top 1% ($228,400+)$333,700 (111%) 40-60% ($29,300-39,700)$5,700 (15%) Income levelTax cut% Increase in Income Due to Tax Cuts Top 1%$34,9004.6% 40-60%$7422.6% ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005 Source: Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center, 2005

20 You Get What You Pay For Avg. Teacher salaries 1 33 rd Pupil-Teacher ratio in public schools 2 33 rd State Aid Per Pupil 3 38 th Secondary Teachers w/Degrees in the Subjects They Teach 4 46 th Avg. SAT Scores 5 48 th High School Graduation Rate 6 50 th 1 National Education Association, 2004-05 2 Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Where We Stand 2003 3 U.S. Dept. of Education, National Center for Education Studies, 2001-02 adjusted by Education Week Research Center for regional cost differences. 4 Quality Counts 2005, Education Week 5 The College Board, 2004 6 U.S. Census, Educational Attainment in the United States, 2003 ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005

21 Education is the Key to Texas Competitiveness The industries that I think about most…are far more sensitive to the quality of talent in the area than they are to tax policies. It is worrisome for the U.S. economy that the number of Americans studying science and engineering is declining while those academic disciplines were increasingly popular in China and other nations. --- Bill Gates, National Conference of State Legislatures, August, 2005

22 Making the System Better Deliver the property tax reduction through a homestead exemption Exempt small businesses with less than $500,000 in gross revenues Deliver a health care tax credit to reward businesses that provide quality health care Expand the sales tax holiday to December Exempt Lone Star Card participants from increases to the sales tax rate or expansion to the sales tax base

23 "Making Texas Competitive" State Senator Eliot Shapleigh January 11, 2005 Texas Tax Reform Commission Revised 9/20/2005 ©Texas State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, 2005


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