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PRESS RELEASE FROM AMERICANS FOR TAX REFORM
Contact: Christopher Butler (
cbutler@atr.org or 202-785-0266)
Click
here for a copy
of this file in Adobe Acrobat.
5/2/02
Massachusetts
House Set To Raise Taxes
To Bail Out Poor Fiscal Management
Income tax hike proposal in Mass. House will overturn previous tax relief
by voter referendum.
WASHINGTON -
In a slap in the face to taxpayers, leaders of the Massachusetts House
of Representatives today indicated they are ready to freeze scheduled
income tax reductions that voters overwhelmingly approved less than
two years ago.
House Speaker
Thomas M. Finneran (D-Boston) told the Boston Herald that a majority
of House members support a measure to increase the rate to 5.6 percent.
The goal is to raise more than $500 million in revenue. However, critics
of the proposal claim that Massachusetts' budget problems are not the
result of working families being under taxed, but rather, bad fiscal
management through reliance on the unstable capital gains tax revenue.
Capital gains revenue is estimated to decline by more than 70 percent
since fiscal year 2000, resulting in a loss of $804 million to the state
treasury. Clearly this is the source of the state's budget problems.
"The situation
in Massachusetts proves that capital gains taxes are not only bad tax
policy, but extremely poor budgetary policy as well," said taxpayer
advocate Grover Norquist, who heads Americans for Tax Reform in Washington.
"When the bubble bursts, all taxpayers have to pay."
This problem
is not just new to Massachusetts. States all across America continually
relied upon capital gains revenue throughout the booming 1990s to fund
permanent programs. And as the markets headed south, states are stuck
with paying the bill for new spending - but with no capital gains revenue
to pay for it.
Revenue from
capital gains taxes is highly volatile and unstable because it is closely
associated with year-to-year fluctuations in the stock market. During
the previous boom, stock prices increased significantly and capital
gains revenue also increased. This revenue was often treated by state
legislatures as a permanent increase in the tax base, and was used to
fund permanent programs. But when the economy slowed and stock prices
fell, capital gains revenue declined significantly. As a result, the
slowdown of volatile capital gains revenue is exacerbating the revenue
shortfall in Massachusetts and thus, places more pressure on lawmakers
to increase taxes in other areas to pay for spending they previously
committed themselves to. Capital gains tax revenue is also nearly impossible
to forecast, as conventional techniques of revenue estimation are less
applicable, because the acquisition of such income depends on decisions
by the taxpayer, such as when to sell those shares of stock.
This reliance
on capital gains revenue by the federal and state governments has significantly
increased budget deficits. Just yesterday, the State of Maine announced
state revenues may drop as much as $90 million by June 30th which was
directly attributed to state capital gains revenue. In California, capital
gains tax revenue declined by $10.5 billion in one year, which has led
to Governor Gray Davis offering massive increases in taxes to offset
the difference.
Americans for Tax Reform is a non-partisan
coalition of taxpayers and taxpayer groups who oppose all federal
and state tax increases. For
more information or to arrange an interview with Mr. Norquist please contact Christopher Butler at (202)785-0266 or by email at
cbutler@atr.org. |