In the World

A just way to fix state budgets

All 50 states have regressive tax structures: the lower your
income, the larger share of it goes to state taxes. While a few states have
flat income-tax rates--here in Illinois, everyone pays 5 percent--most are
mildly progressive (higher rates for higher income). But when you throw in
regressive sales, property and excise taxes, each state's total tax burden
falls hardest on those with the least to spare.

Meanwhile, states are facing major budget crises, requiring
drastic spending cuts, revenue increases or both.

Via Ethics Daily,
United for a Fair Economy offers a solution to both problems: invert the tax
structure to make it progressive--and raise more money. A new report
from the anti-inequality group analyzes data from each state and calculates how
much more money could be raised if you split the population into fifths by
income and then flipped the overall state tax rates.

In Illinois (pdf), the poorest fifth of the
population pays 13.0 percent of its income in state taxes, while the richest
fifth pays 6.2 percent. Switching these numbers--and doing the same with the
second-poorest and second-richest groups--would increase state revenue by more
than 50 percent. (Those of us in the middle fifth income-wise would stay at the
same rate.)

It's an elegantly simple proposal. It'll never happen, of course--the
political hurdles would be insurmountable. Still, an exercise like this is
valuable. It highlights a startling reality: states hit poor people up for a
greater share of their money than they do rich people. The fact that reversing
this would pull states out of near-bankruptcy is only a secondary reason to do
it. The main reason is that the current situation is shockingly unfair.

Elsewhere, Sylvester Schieber and Phillip
Longman offer a smart analysis of state fiscal issues: unions aren't the
problem, but pensions are a big part of it--and the solution may lie in
empowering voters to keep lawmakers from using pensions to kick financial problems
down the road.

Steve Thorngate

The Century managing editor is also a church musician and songwriter.

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