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Tuesday October 7, 2008 | ||||||
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National Study: State Tax Breaks are Bad Business
Especially relevant in a time of "jobless recovery" and with states competing against each other to lure businesses, a new study released by the Economic Policy Institute offers strong evidence that low state taxes and business tax incentives not only do not create jobs, but they also hurt the long run economic climate. According to author Robert G. Lynch, "instead of creating jobs, tax cutting strategies that undermine government's ability to provide quality services can end up destroying jobs." Lynch finds that tax cuts are an unreliable method to attract business and promote economic development. "The bottom line," he says, "is that state and local taxes, at their current low levels, may be largely irrelevant to business investment decisions." "These findings are consistent with concerns raised by NJPP's recent report, Taking Care of Business: Does it Cost Too Much?" said Jon Shure, president of New Jersey Policy Perspective, which is helping to release the Lynch study. "We hope this will help spark debate in New Jersey over who gets what-and what they do in return for tax dollars." In Rethinking Growth Strategies: How State and Local Taxes and Services Affect Economic Development, Lynch, an economist and chair of the Department of Economics at Washington College, reviews hundreds of research studies on this topic. He concludes that there is little proof that state and local taxation play a prominent role in business location decisions. He systematically examines arguments that are commonly used to justify state and local tax cuts and incentives and shows the weaknesses in each of these arguments. Those arguments are:
Lynch's study makes the case that tax cutting at the state and local level is not only ineffective at attracting businesses, but also a very poor use of scarce state and local resources. For example, for every dollar cut in state and local taxes, a business realizes a revenue increase of only about 60 cents. The other 40 cents goes to the federal government and other jurisdictions because the firm's deduction for state taxes has fallen. In addition, for every private sector job created by state and local tax cuts, governments lose between $39,000 and $78,000 in annual tax revenues. This revenue loss forces lay-offs of more employees in the public sector than were gained in the private sector, producing a net loss of jobs from the tax cuts. According to Lynch, "the real lesson here for legislators and local policy makers is that what makes a community a good place to do business looks a lot like what makes a community a good place to live. That means good schools, good police and fire protection, a modern and well-maintained transportation infrastructure, and good all-around public services." For more information, see the Economic Policy Institute website, www.epinet.org.
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