In the ongoing debate over tax cuts, both sides make arguments that
sound plausible. Progressives and liberals claim that a state with low
taxes can't invest in schools, roads, and other improvements that boost
productivity. Conservatives claim that high taxes discourage
entrepreneurs and push businesses to flee the state. Both arguments are
logical—but both cannot be true.
This argument reminds of a sign I once saw a sign in a
client's office which read, "In God we Trust. All Others Must Bring
Data." What does the data tell us about taxes and incomes?
How higher taxes affect personal income
The Tax Foundation, a respected conservative-leaning group, has analyzed tax issues since 1937. They publish reports showing the average income and average tax load for all 50 states. Their analysis includes all state and local taxes.
I've charted this data (below) and added a green line to separate
the states with high incomes from the rest. Aside from a few outliers,
the trend is obvious: All but one of the states that enjoy higher
incomes (greater than $50,000 per person) also impose higher total
taxes (above 9 percent). At the same time, all but one of the states
that keep taxes low (less than 9 percent) have lower incomes.
There is no evidence in this chart to confirm that low taxes lead to
prosperity. In contrast, higher taxes accompany higher incomes, not
the other way around.
Higher incomes or higher taxes: Which come first?
Although the chart shows high incomes and high taxes go hand in
hand, it raises the question of which comes first: Do higher taxes
enable higher incomes, or do higher incomes simply make high taxes
acceptable? Frankly the evidence here is mixed.
One important state on the high-income side of the chart is
Massachusetts, which owes its prosperity to great universities and to
the successful technology companies spawned by their alumni.
Massachusetts shows that taxes, when invested
in leading educational institutions, can create prosperity even
without other economic advantages. Northern California, if it were a
separate state, would illustrate this point as well. Stanford
University provides essential support for Silicon Valley. The leading
private universities do not take direct support from state or local
taxes, but they take a great deal of indirect state taxpayer support,
since they are exempt from taxes on their property and income.
The other high-income states fall into two distinct clusters: the
financial services cluster of New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut
(fueled by Wall Street), and the government cluster of District of
Columbia, Maryland, and to a lesser extent Virginia (fueled by the U.S.
capital and its lobbyists and government contractors). Wall Street
and the nation's capital exert such strong magnetism on talent that
these states may not need top quality education and infrastructure to
maintain their prosperity. People who live there pay higher taxes
because they value the things that higher taxes provide (better roads,
schools, parks, transit, cultural amenities and more.) In turn, these
services and amenities attract tourists who bring even money to these
already-prosperous areas.
How some states with low taxes generate healthy incomes for residents
A few states—Alaska, Nevada, Florida, Wyoming, and New
Hampshire—impose very low tax rates yet their residents enjoy solid
mid-range incomes. Do these states blaze a trail that other states can
follow?
Unfortunately these states' success is tough to copy. Both Alaska
and Wyoming have abundant and valuable natural resources (energy and
minerals) coupled with small populations and little need for public
services. Nevada, Florida, and Wyoming benefit greatly from tourism as
well. And New Hampshire gets a free ride from Massachusetts-based high
tech companies without paying the corresponding taxes.
How do low taxes really affect growth in income?
A new study
by the Institute on Taxation and Economy Policy provides additional
perspective. Researchers at this respected, progressive-leaning group
looked at the net change in income from 2001 to 2010. They compared the nine states with the highest income tax against the nine states with the lowest income tax. The results, in the chart below, show that the states with the highest taxes actually had the strongest economies throughout a difficult decade.
There are no guarantees when it comes to taxes and economic
development. But without abundant natural resources or heavy tourism or
the generosity of a neighbor, no state in the United States has been
able to sustain high prosperity without a robust tax base. The data
speaks clearly on this point.
Let's trust it.
Via: http://www.usnews.com/opinion/blogs/economic-intelligence/2012/05/03/do-lower-taxes-create-jobs-lets-look-at-the-states
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