Economists Arthur Laffer and Stephen Moore have an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal that analyzes how people and capital leave higher tax states for lower tax states.
From the Wall Street Journal:
Updating some research from Richard Vedder of Ohio University, we found that from 1998 to 2007, more than 1,100 people every day including Sundays and holidays moved from the nine highest income-tax states such as California, New Jersey, New York and Ohio and relocated mostly to the nine tax-haven states with no income tax, including Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire and Texas. We also found that over these same years the no-income tax states created 89% more jobs and had 32% faster personal income growth than their high-tax counterparts.
…Or consider the fiasco of New Jersey. In the early 1960s, the state had no state income tax and no state sales tax. It was a rapidly growing state attracting people from everywhere and running budget surpluses. Today its income and sales taxes are among the highest in the nation yet it suffers from perpetual deficits and its schools rank among the worst in the nation -- much worse than those in New Hampshire. Most of the massive infusion of tax dollars over the past 40 years has simply enriched the public-employee unions in the Garden State. People are fleeing the state in droves.
This is a no-brainer: you get less of that which you tax; you get more of that which you subsidize.If New Jersey wants to run its millionaires out of state, all they have to do is raise the marginal tax rates.
Now who will pay the taxes in that state?
No comments:
Post a Comment