It looks obvious

“Things should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler.” — Albert Einstein

The return of common sense

Comments

The Wall Street Journal reports that many state start to look favorably at the idea of abolishing the state income tax. The reason, which should come at no surprise, is that taxes are bad for the economy:

In Georgia, Missouri and South Carolina, Governors and state legislatures are drafting serious proposals to repeal their income taxes to promote economic development. St. Louis, one of America’s most distressed cities, may overturn its wage/income tax as a way to spur urban revival. And in Michigan, the legislature is in the last stages of phasing out its hated business income tax — the most onerous in the land. “States are now in a ferocious competition to attract jobs and businesses,” says economist Arthur Laffer, who is advising several Governors and legislators on the issue, “and one of the best ways to win this race is to abolish the state income tax.”

It is encouraging that politician, at least at the state level, start to realize the simple fact that income tax is bad for the economy and has a devastating effect on the state wealth. It is interesting to note that states economy showed rapid decline after enacting income tax:

State lawmakers also seem to have learned from two of the most recent states to adopt an income tax: New Jersey and Connecticut. As recently as 1965 New Jersey had neither an income nor sales tax, but managed to balance its budget every year. Now it has both taxes — its income tax is the 5th highest in the nation — but the state is facing what Stateline.org calls a “staggering budget deficit.” Allied Van Lines reports that the Garden State is now one of the leading places for people to flee.

The latest state to adopt an income tax was Connecticut in 1991, but a new report by the Yankee Institute reveals that the tax has been a calamity. The state has ranked last in employment growth since 1991, losing 240,000 of its native born citizens between 1991-2002. No other state has since enacted an income tax, and lawmakers in Georgia, Missouri and South Carolina say Connecticut is now the model for how not to run a state economy.

It will take some time, and the high tax state will continue to loose businesses and population, but ultimately the common sense will have to win. I only wonder what can trigger the same conclusion at the federal level.

Technorati Tags: - -

No tag for this post.

Written by Rogel

January 26th, 2007 at 3:12 pm

Posted in The Free Market


Warning: strtotime() [function.strtotime]: Called with an empty time parameter. in /var/www/vhosts/rogelsview.com/httpdocs/wp-content/plugins/disqus/disqus.php on line 130

Trackbacks

blog comments powered by Disqus