If 2006 was the year of surpluses for states, 2007 could be the year of tax hikes. Five governors are proposing hefty tax increases to bankroll ambitious new health-care and education programs. Proposals to raise cigarette taxes are on the table in even more states, with the increased revenue going primarily to cover some of the nation’s 46.6 million without health insurance.
Interest in raising taxes is strikingly different from the situation just a few years ago, when legislatures facing a fiscal crisis bent over backwards to avoid major tax hikes, instead of raiding rainy day funds, borrowing money or expanding gambling to raise more revenue. Then, the aim was to keep the state budget out of the red. Now, the aim is to expand the reach of state government — often to provide health coverage for more citizens.
Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D) has pitched a whopping $6 billion in new business taxes to pay for his plan to extend health care coverage to 1.4 million uninsured adults. In Connecticut, Gov. M. Jodi Rell, a Republican, stunned state lawmakers with her proposal to lift the income tax rate by 10 percent to bring in $1.3 billion of new money for education.
The governors of Pennsylvania and Wisconsin both want to slap higher taxes on smokers and oil companies, with the extra cash going specifically to provide health care coverage to the uninsured and to patch roads. And Michigan is looking at higher business and “sin” taxes to close its $3 billion deficit and to enable more school districts to offer full-day pre-school to 4-year-olds.
This is states’ first round of budgets since the 2006 election increased Democrats’ hold on governorships to 28 and gave the Democratic Party the upper hand in 23 statehouses. Most, though not all, of the proposed tax increases come from Democrats.
Big Expenses
Cigarettes taxes, now up to $2.58 per pack in New Jersey, the highest in the country, were frequently tapped to plug budget holes in many states through the 2001-05 economic downturn. Now, they’re popular as a source of revenue for new spending. Iowa Gov. Chet Culver (D), for example, has already signed into law his $1 tax hike on a pack of cigarettes – more than tripling the prior 36-cents-a-pack rate. The new money will go toward curbing smoking and providing health insurance to needy children.
While pressure is building in a number of states to cut property taxes this year, so is interest among some politicians to bump up certain taxes and use the money for specific projects that might have been ignored during the years of budget cutbacks.
One reason steeper taxes may be attractive is that states have big-ticket items looming on the horizon that must compete for scarce state dollars. Spending on existing education and health care programs typically eats up more than half of a state budget, leaving the rest to be divvied up between transportation projects that have been put on hold, future pension and health care needs for state retirees, and costly federal mandates such as REAL ID, a law that requires states to beef up the security of their driver’s licenses.
Money Management
State revenues are generally healthy, but no one is banking on the extra cash that a strong economy brought to most state coffers last year. “Some states will land with surpluses, but it won’t be as universal as last year,” predicted Scott Pattison, executive director of the National Association of State Budget Officers.
Sujit CanagaRetna, a state fiscal expert at the Council of State Governments, said that tax collections, particularly the sales tax, appear to be weakening in some states. And talk of a possible recession later this year, including comments from former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, has some states jittery, he said. “The economy seems to be in a slow-down mode. … A lot of folks are getting nervous,” CanagaRetna said.
Nick Johnson, who heads up the state fiscal project of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, said the fact that so many of the proposals dedicate the new money to help those without health care insurance “reflects the imperative that states feel somehow, someway, they must expand health care.” He also contends that tax increases, at least targeted ones, are becoming more politically acceptable. “We are starting to see some softening of the ‘no-new taxes’ sentiment. … It doesn’t have the same force it used to have,” he said.
