Significant Tax Reform Likely to be Ugly and Unproductive | Eastern North Carolina Now

The drumbeat for tax reform in 2013 is growing louder with each passing day, but ask those beating the drums what they mean by reform and you get very different answers.

ENCNow
    The drumbeat for tax reform in 2013 is growing louder with each passing day, but ask those beating the drums what they mean by reform and you get very different answers.

    For some, tax reform means closing loopholes; others think it is dramatically cutting or even eliminating personal and/or corporate income taxes. Some advocate the taxing of services. But there is one common theme, once articulated by the late Louisiana Senator Russell Long: "Don't tax him, don't tax me. Tax that fellow behind the tree." Everyone wants to maintain or even reduce the amount they pay, shifting taxes to someone else.

    We've had many blue
Tom Campbell
ribbon studies on the subject but none of them accomplished much. When you ask the wrong questions you always get the wrong answers. These are serious decisions that require our best thinking and we grow concerned when we hear, as we have recently heard, politicians arbitrarily say they are going to cut personal income taxes by one-half and eliminate corporate income taxes altogether. Perhaps that is the right thing to do but it is a decision to be made only after careful deliberation of our overall tax philosophy.

    There is a growing sentiment on both the national and state levels that we should eliminate the income tax and move to a consumption or use tax. Personal and corporate income taxes account for roughly 55 percent of the almost 20 billion dollars North Carolina receives in General Fund revenues. If we do keep the income tax should it contribute 55 percent of the total revenue or should it be less? Sales and use taxes account for 27 percent, franchise taxes add another 3 percent and almost 10 percent consists of licenses and other fees. What is the right mix for these categories? We should also be asking whether we want to continue to mirror federal tax codes or, as some propose, should we uncouple them to reflect our own philosophy?

    Governor McCrory has said he wants to close the loopholes or "tax expenditures," adding, "Let me send all of you a message because this is not going to be an easy battle with an easy solution. It's going to step on everyone's toes a little bit." Those loopholes are expenditures estimated to amount to 9 billion dollars, with about half of that amount coming from standard and itemized income tax deductions and exemptions on income tax, government retirement income, prescription drugs, sales taxes on groceries and the like. They benefit most every man, woman and child. The rest will affect business and special interest groups who have already hired an army of lobbyists and are geared up to preserve and protect their positions.

    My former boss and mentor, the late State Treasurer Harlan Boyles, speculated that the only way significant reforms would be accomplished was to deputize a select group to craft new tax codes and then bring the plan to both houses of the legislature for a straight up or down vote, meaning no amendments or changes could be made, something unlikely to happen.

    We need significant tax reform. What we may get could be ugly and unproductive. This is a time for statesmen to do the right thing for our state. Any changes could be in place many years.

    Publisher's note: Tom Campbell is former assistant North Carolina State Treasurer and is creator/host of NC SPIN, a weekly statewide television discussion of NC issues airing Sundays at 11:00 am on WITN-TV. Contact Tom at NC Spin.
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published)
Enter Your Comment ( no code or urls allowed, text only please )




GOP leaders soften stance on [BLANK] My Spin, Editorials, Op-Ed & Politics The corruption continues in Raleigh


HbAD0

Latest Op-Ed & Politics

Vice President Kamala Harris’ husband, Doug Emhoff, admitted that he cheated on his first wife with the couple’s babysitter after a report was published on Saturday that said the marriage ended after he got the babysitter pregnant.
A black Georgia activist became the center of attention at a rally for former president Donald Trump on Saturday when she riled the crowd in support of Trump and how his policies benefit black Americans.
Former President has been indicted by a federal judge in Pennsylvania for inciting an assassination attempt that nearly killed him.
A federal judge ruled on Monday that Google has a monopoly over general search engine services, siding with the Justice Department and more than two dozen states that sued the tech company, alleging antitrust violations.
3 debates and Twitter interview
If we vote the way we have always voted we will get the kind of government we have always gotten
Check it out and see if you think this is an exhibit of Open Government

HbAD1

Acting U.S. Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe told reporters on Friday that his agency was fully responsible for the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump last month and that the agency “should have had eyes” on the roof where 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks.
Smartmatic was at center of voting machine controversy in US 2020 election
If we vote the way we have always voted we will get the kind of government we have always gotten

HbAD2

 
Back to Top