Soak the Rich, Lose the Rich

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By ARTHUR LAFFER and STEPHEN MOORE

With states facing nearly $100 billion in combined budget deficits this year, we're seeing more governors than ever proposing the Barack Obama solution to balancing the budget: Soak the rich. Lawmakers in California, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York and Oregon want to raise income tax rates on the top 1% or 2% or 5% of their citizens. New Illinois Gov. Patrick Quinn wants a 50% increase in the income tax rate on the wealthy because this is the "fair" way to close his state's gaping deficit.


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<cite>Chad Crowe</cite>


Mr. Quinn and other tax-raising governors have been emboldened by recent studies by left-wing groups like the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities that suggest that "tax increases, particularly tax increases on higher-income families, may be the best available option." A recent letter to New York Gov. David Paterson signed by 100 economists advises the Empire State to "raise tax rates for high incomefamilies right away." Here's the problem for states that want to pry more money out of the wallets of rich people. It never works because people, investment capital and businesses are mobile: They can leave tax-unfriendly states and move to tax-friendly states.
And the evidence that we discovered in our new study for the American Legislative Exchange Council, "Rich States, Poor States," published in March, shows that Americans are more sensitive to high taxes than ever before. The tax differential between low-tax and high-tax states is widening, meaning that a relocation from high-tax California or Ohio, to no-income tax Texas or Tennessee, is all the more financially profitable both in terms of lower tax bills and more job opportunities.
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.
Did the greater prosperity in low-tax states happen by chance? Is it coincidence that the two highest tax-rate states in the nation, California and New York, have the biggest fiscal holes to repair? No. Dozens of academic studies -- old and new -- have found clear and irrefutable statistical evidence that high state and local taxes repel jobs and businesses.
Martin Feldstein, Harvard economist and former president of the National Bureau of Economic Research, co-authored a famous study in 1998 called "Can State Taxes Redistribute Income?" This should be required reading for today's state legislators. It concludes: "Since individuals can avoid unfavorable taxes by migrating to jurisdictions that offer more favorable tax conditions, a relatively unfavorable tax will cause gross wages to adjust. . . . A more progressive tax thus induces firms to hire fewer high skilled employees and to hire more low skilled employees."
More recently, Barry W. Poulson of the University of Colorado last year examined many factors that explain why some states grew richer than others from 1964 to 2004 and found "a significant negative impact of higher marginal tax rates on state economic growth." In other words, soaking the rich doesn't work. To the contrary, middle-class workers end up taking the hit.
Finally, there is the issue of whether high-income people move away from states that have high income-tax rates. Examining IRS tax return data by state, E.J. McMahon, a fiscal expert at the Manhattan Institute, measured the impact of large income-tax rate increases on the rich ($200,000 income or more) in Connecticut, which raised its tax rate in 2003 to 5% from 4.5%; in New Jersey, which raised its rate in 2004 to 8.97% from 6.35%; and in New York, which raised its tax rate in 2003 to 7.7% from 6.85%. Over the period 2002-2005, in each of these states the "soak the rich" tax hike was followed by a significant reduction in the number of rich people paying taxes in these states relative to the national average. Amazingly, these three states ranked 46th, 49th and 50th among all states in the percentage increase in wealthy tax filers in the years after they tried to soak the rich.
This result was all the more remarkable given that these were years when the stock market boomed and Wall Street gains were in the trillions of dollars. Examining data from a 2008 Princeton study on the New Jersey tax hike on the wealthy, we found that there were 4,000 missing half-millionaires in New Jersey after that tax took effect. New Jersey now has one of the largest budget deficits in the nation.
We believe there are three unintended consequences from states raising tax rates on the rich. First, some rich residents sell their homes and leave the state; second, those who stay in the state report less taxable income on their tax returns; and third, some rich people choose not to locate in a high-tax state. Since many rich people also tend to be successful business owners, jobs leave with them or they never arrive in the first place. This is why high income-tax states have such a tough time creating net new jobs for low-income residents and college graduates.
Those who disapprove of tax competition complain that lower state taxes only create a zero-sum competition where states "race to the bottom" and cut services to the poor as taxes fall to zero. They say that tax cutting inevitably means lower quality schools and police protection as lower tax rates mean starvation of public services.
They're wrong, and New Hampshire is our favorite illustration. The Live Free or Die State has no income or sales tax, yet it has high-quality schools and excellent public services. Students in New Hampshire public schools achieve the fourth-highest test scores in the nation -- even though the state spends about $1,000 a year less per resident on state and local government than the average state and, incredibly, $5,000 less per person than New York. And on the other side of the ledger, California in 2007 had the highest-paid classroom teachers in the nation, and yet the Golden State had the second-lowest test scores.
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.
One last point: States aren't simply competing with each other. As Texas Gov. Rick Perry recently told us, "Our state is competing with Germany, France, Japan and China for business. We'd better have a pro-growth tax system or those American jobs will be out-sourced." Gov. Perry and Texas have the jobs and prosperity model exactly right. Texas created more new jobs in 2008 than all other 49 states combined. And Texas is the only state other than Georgia and North Dakota that is cutting taxes this year.
The Texas economic model makes a whole lot more sense than the New Jersey model, and we hope the politicians in California, Delaware, Illinois, Minnesota and New York realize this before it's too late.
Mr. Laffer is president of Laffer Associates. Mr. Moore is senior economics writer for the Wall Street Journal. They are co-authors of "Rich States, Poor States" (American Legislative Exchange Council, 2009).
 

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An anecdote in support: Last week Tom Golisano, owner of the Buffalo Sabres, founder of Paychex, and one of the wealthiest men in New York, told a Rochester lunchtime audience he was changing his residence from NY to FL because the NY Legislature passed the Millionaire's Tax, raising the New York personal income tax rate from about 7% to 9%. His personal income disclosure was revealing.

He estimates he will save $13,000 PER DAY by becoming a Florida citizen and paying no personal income tax. Had he remained in NY, his personal income tax bill would have risen by about $1M per year - from $3.5M to $4.5M.

Because he had been a severe critic of NY tax policy over the years, his move to Florida was barely remarked upon outside of Upstate NY, and the few downstate comments were in the nature of "good riddance". But his disclosure created quite a stir, and a lot of conversation Upstate. There has been a lot more discussion about how long it will make sense to remain a NY taxpayer before following our children to the states less under the influence of the public employee and health care unions and their pension obligations.
^<<^
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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Cool. More residents with jack living here in FLorida means more business to our various fast food outlets.
 

Oh boy!
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I'll never forget one of the local radio station commentators commenting Obama's increase on taxes on the rich. He went on about how difficult it is for small business owners to open a business and work long hours to make over $300k/yr. and how doctors and dentists go to 4 years of school after college and incur tens of thousands of dollars of debt so they can make the salaries they do. Now they are penalized for doing so.

I'm not talking about the ultra-rich who make tens of millions of dollars a year. I'm talking about the lower end that make between $300k - $1 million per year that are being penalized. These are the people who employ people in small businesses and many of them will have to lay people off because of higher taxes.
 

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Who do you tax? The poor have no money. The middle class pays a higher percent of their discretionary income than any other.

You must cut cost but what to cut? The conservatives seem to like the aggressor nation role and letting big business have free reign (they will do right, its in their best interest), but no welfare, they hate welfare. The Liberals want to end our warlike tendencies and control big business.

Virtually all our debt has been incurred since 1970 and the conservatives have been in control 26 of those 38 years and we are forced to try and spend ourselves out of a depression.

Talk about a failed economic system, the conservative way sucks.
 

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Who do you tax? The poor have no money. The middle class pays a higher percent of their discretionary income than any other.

You must cut cost but what to cut? The conservatives seem to like the aggressor nation role and letting big business have free reign (they will do right, its in their best interest), but no welfare, they hate welfare. The Liberals want to end our warlike tendencies and control big business.

Virtually all our debt has been incurred since 1970 and the conservatives have been in control 26 of those 38 years and we are forced to try and spend ourselves out of a depression.

Talk about a failed economic system, the conservative way sucks.

Virtually all our debt has been incurred since 1970 and the conservatives have been in control 26 of those 38 years and we are forced to try and spend ourselves out of a depression.

The Obama solution is to put on more debt than all the others combined...this is how you get out of a depression huh?

:ohno:

wapoobamabudget1.jpg


:):) @)
 

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The economist tell us that we must.

PS: your figures are so fucked up as to be laughable.
 

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The economist tell us that we must.

PS: your figures are so fucked up as to be laughable.

Tell that to Obama...:laugh:

"White House Estimate" :103631605
 

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The stats look pretty clear to me.

Even Obama's people admit... estimate... that his BEST years would be worse than Bush's WORST years as far as debt goes. Look, Bush wasn't my favorite president, but my complaint against Bush was that he spent too much money. Obama the financial terrorist makes Bush look like a fucking cheapskate.

Obama is a financial terrorist.
 

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Who do you tax? The poor have no money. The middle class pays a higher percent of their discretionary income than any other.

You must cut cost but what to cut? The conservatives seem to like the aggressor nation role and letting big business have free reign (they will do right, its in their best interest), but no welfare, they hate welfare. The Liberals want to end our warlike tendencies and control big business.

Virtually all our debt has been incurred since 1970 and the conservatives have been in control 26 of those 38 years and we are forced to try and spend ourselves out of a depression.

Talk about a failed economic system, the conservative way sucks.

We were on the longest bull market in human history where standards of living increased, and a RELATIVLEY peaceful time too. Even in the "democrat" years, we had a republican legislature and a mod president.

NOW, we have a socialist and a financial terrorist with no experience.
 

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Great article. However, the title is a little deceiving in my opinion. Not only are they soaking the "rich", but the middle class well. If a middle class family is bringing in $400k annually, they are taking nearly half of it and giving it directly to the foreign private bankers who run this country.


Highway robbery. The country is gone.
 

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If you go through med school, and put yourself in possibly 200K worth of debt including your regular 4 year college... why should you be giving all your money away to the government come tax time?

Sure you might be making 200K to 500K, but when you are in 200K worth of debt you certainly aren't "rich".
 

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All hail Chairman Maobama!
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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WILLIE99 and I can't be the only two members here who look forward to the next eight years as being the best years of our lives to date.
 

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The economist tell us that we must.

PS: your figures are so fucked up as to be laughable.

You do know Obama's figures are presented in that chart, right?

You're correct about "fucked up", the laughable part? not so much
 

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WILLIE99 and I can't be the only two members here who look forward to the next eight years as being the best years of our lives to date.


See that's part of the problem. You have all these hood rats voting for change, and they think that Obama is going to pay their mortgage, Obama is going to give them a high paid job, Obama is going to make them rich, Obama is going to fix their love life...

The 52.7 laziest percent of the population voted for a dream that won't come true. You even have NY Times econ reporters in heavy debt ( and voting Obama). It crosses socioeconomic lines. The lazy voted for the guy that said he'd make their lives easier by stealing money...
 

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