Iowa Tax Reform in 2005?

 Iowa Tax Reform in 2005?




I caught
a few reports on Tom Vilsack speaking to the “Iowa Taxpayers
Association” yesterday on WOI Radio with proposals to reform the Iowa Tax Code, and today David Yepsen writes a column with some of the highlights.




I point you to the column to read Yepsen's comments on the details of the proposal, but here are the points Vilsack addressed:



Eliminate federal deductibility. 



This
proposal has been on the table for some time.  Iowa is one of the
few states that allows you to deduct federal taxes from your state
return – but in order to make up for the smaller taxable income, tax
rates are kept higher than they would be without the federal deduction.




It is a
little disappointing that we treat this as an urgent proposal. 
Truthfully, I imagine that this subject is better talk-radio fodder
than substantive input for corporate accounting departments.




Eliminate the state income tax on all pension and Social Security income



The reason that Yepsen atrributes to Vilsack for this strikes me as fairly odd:



In
the past, he rejected this idea, arguing that since the state already
exempts some of this income, exempting all of it would benefit only
well-to-do Iowans.




When I
think of friends and relatives that rely on Social Security and
pensions to provide retirement income the term “well-to-do” is not the
first term that comes to mind.




Considering
that increases in property taxes and health care costs have hit seniors
on fixed incomes particularly hard, providing whatever relief we can
with the state tax code seems to be a good idea.

The trick here, however, is to keep such a reduction
revenue-neutral.  (Of course, this also depends on what is meant
by the phrase “some of this income” – does anyone know what the limits
are?)



Expand the base of the sales tax. 

The examples used by Vilsack seem to make sense:



He wants the sales tax to apply to more services, such as engineering and accounting fees.



As the
legislation-writing unfolds, we should keep an eye on “which services”
are taxed.  (Yepsen accuses Vilsack of pandering to his interests
by exempting legal services from taxes.  There are arguments to be
made, but I do know that a wage earner is far more likely to use the
services of a lawyer than the services of an engineer.)




Allow Iowans to vote on any proposal to increase sales- or income-tax rates. 

Yepsen calls this a “compromise” position – but it seems to be a horrible idea.



Why? 
When we're in a situation (as we are now) where all reserve funds for
state government are tapped, the legislature will need some flexibility
in raising funds without going through an electoral process to approve
small increases in service and sales taxes.




Do we
really think we could do without some vital services (such as last
year's cutbacks in State Patrol hours and patrolled territories) while
we wait six to nine months for an election to be held?




I would
feel better about this proposal if state funding was on firm footing –
but it's not.  Last year's budget was balanced by using “one time”
sources of funding:  tough decisions will have to be made this
year regardless of the political situation.

Besides – if our we don't want our legislators to make decisions on
fiscal and economic policy, why elect them in the first place? 
For the “social issue showboating” that last year's GOP leadership
highlighted?



Create a higher state earned income tax credit for lower-income Iowans and make it refundable. 

This is agreeable, however I am bothered by the notion that changes to
tax policy are the only way working families can see an increased
standard of living.



I would
like to see this proposal go hand-in-hand with some form of increase in
the minimum wage and a strengthening of labor laws.


I'm obviously not a tax-law policy wonk, but those are my first
reactions to what is likely to be the first topic introduced in
Vilsack's “State of the State” address.

What are your thoughts?

This entry was posted in Iowa in the News, Jobs, Main Page. Bookmark the permalink.