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Popular Threads
Lower the sales tax a point or two, as a start.
Plus, we could get creative. A tax on throwing junk pitches that work the count up from 0-1 to 3-2 would gain us millions a year just from Zambrano.....
The tax system is this state is goofy. While there may be no state tax on services, local municpalites can tax amusement and user items like video rentals, movie theatres, golf rounds, bowling games, ect. so we get hit anyway with local taxes on those items.
They tried. It failed.
Too much money in all those service sectors to lobby against it.
The ultimate issue is spending. We are all guilty of suggesting that the government take care of this or that, despite the known inefficiencies.
Several things need to happen.
One is that we need to bring in some of that business acumen that has been trimming corporate staffing while maintaining productivity.
Secondly we need to place some boundaries as to what government is willing to do for us. Currently government is the sugar daddy of all good causes. Charity is one thing when it is voluntary, but the public pocketbook is not the place for manditory charity.
Third and final for today, we have to start consolidating all the taxing bodies we have in this state. The Boards tend to be enthusiasts for their activity and have taxiing power in the property tax. A serious and honest effort needs to be done to streamline away the overhead for the services. Each and every one of these entities has a Board, facilities, administrative staff that could be thinned without effecting the services provided to the constituents.
All this overhead is also compensated royally. It is time to bring public salaries and benefits to that of the private sector.
Federal deductibility. You can't write sales taxes or other fees off your federal taxes. I would drop sales taxes so that they were equal to or less than any neighboring state.
It's not a perfect solution, but at least more money would be left in Illinois.
There are good arguments for various taxes, but to me the federal deductibility is the main issue.
http://censtats.census.gov/cgi-bin/cbpnaic
Top 6 sectors for Cook County (by % of total payroll spending)
15% Finance
13% Professional, Scientific, Tech
11% Health Care
10% Manufacturing
7% Wholesale Trade
6% Management of companies
That means that #1, #2, #3 and #6 of our top sectors pay little to no sales tax. Include them, but reduce the rate, and you can get it passed.
We have been discussing tax swaps and so far it has stalled in Illinois. This kind of work requires leadership that we do not have in Springfield.
The GRT died because it is a stupid tax and an obsolete tax that we have been seeing eliminated throughout the US since the 1930s. Its revitalization is a boon only to politicians and lobbyists. The GRT is such a stupid tax, that as the state of Washington has discovered, that it can actually inflate a state's gross state product beyond reality. Additionally, the massive lobbying efforts needed to continually fix the inequalities with a GRT is a boon only to lobbyists who work state legislators daily.
So the GRT is damn stupid and died because it was tried and had been shown to fail repeatedly 40-50 times over the past 90 years.
But we need tax reform - yes. But I do not want taxes "reformed" by a bunch of people who believe that taxes are a good thing or a necessary thing. I want people who hate taxes reforming our tax laws. Only with these kind of people can citizens not get royally screwed. Every tax dollar taken from your pocket leaves you with less freedom to make personal choices. Got that?
http://www.citybarbs.com/?p=62 where I discuss corporate tax dodges.
Service taxes deserve a look too. It's past time to decrease our overdependence on household real estate taxes.
If you want to live in a country without taxes, I'm sure Saudi Arabia are UAE would love to have you. Otherwise, I think you're going to be disappointed.
The rich are getting away with murder in the tax sense.
Democrats are increasingly guilty in bringing this about because increasingly their campaign donations come from the uber-wealthy who are trying to buy them off...and do. The Democrats are as easily purchased as the Republicans.
Charles Rangel has some interesting ideas on the national level including a surcharge on AGI's over
$200,000. We should be considering that in Illinois. The wealthy plutocrats who run this state will squeal like the piggies they are but
a progressive income tax coupled with a major reduction in property taxes would still provide
mega-funds for all their porky projects and patronage, uh, civil service jobs for their relatives and friends.
Lower the sales tax and start taxing more services. The State will actually bring in more money. Also a tax on services are more progressive than a tax on goods.
There is a possible logical flaw though. The source of the tax revenues is still the buying public. So instead of paying a 10% sales tax on a bowling ball, I pay 2% tax on my bowling ball, dinner, movie, plumbing work. In the end I am still the source of the money, they are just nickle and diming it from a larger variety of services.
so in the end it seems a bit of 6 of one half a dozen of the other.
There are two major gaps in our tax system today, compared to the modern economy: (1) we are now a much more a services driven economy than a manufacturing / sales one, and, (2) the increase of immigrants is bringing along with them an underground economy where "a friend" fixes your car or plumbing and no paperwork or taxes get assessed. Cash transactions.
The way to slip towards taxing services is to start with those services where a sales tax is already being collected for a portion of the activity. Get an oil change, and you pay taxes on the new oil put in but not the wrap-around service - and the oil change business is already collecting state sales tax. Add to that: movies (you already pay tax on the more profitable popcorn and the theater collects and pays that tax), hair styling and barbering (every shop sells hair products and collects the tax on them), plumbing visits (you pay tax on the new plumbing system parts installed)and air conditioning / heating system calls. I would add TV repair visits, but those hardly happen anymore.
Home and office cleaning services, too, since they use cleaning supplies. Start with these in 2008, see how much they raise, and then gradually spread them to other private sector services as a "use" tax sales tax.
On taxing the growing underground economy -- I have no idea!
Come on, Cassandra, that's no kind of argument. Why such hostility to high-earners? Some of you guys should really visit me some time, I'll show you around a couple downtown funds, you can take a look at how hard these people work and the kind of taxes they pay, and then say it to their faces.
In the meantime, don't expect that raising marginal income from 35 to 44 effective (per Rangel's proposal) will raise federal revenues substantially.
http://www.ctbaonline.org/All%20Li
nks%20to%20Research%20Areas%
20and%20Reports/Budget,%20Tax%
20and%20Revenue/Expansion%20
of%20the%20Sales%20Tax%20Updated.pdf
Seriously, start with attorney fees. If there's anything our culture is addicted more than smoking, it's lawyers.
Lobbyists baby!
http://www.ctbaonlin
e.org/All%20Links%20
to%20Research%20Are
as%20and%20Reports/Budget,%
20Tax%20and%20Revenue/Expansion
%20of%20the%20Sales%20Tax%
20Updated.pdf
Sorry - you have to copy and paste.
Like a good investment portfolio, it also needs to be diverse.
To the single nasty comment, where is your plan? What have you produced other than another nasty comment? We have enough of that in leadership right now. All nasty, no substance.
Illinois deserves more.
Anyway, I suspect that a lower state sales tax rate combined with an expanded base would bring in new revenue and meet with majority political support among the electorate. I think the many critics of the Governor should offer him some credit for identifying the problem of a 1950s tax system and embrace modernization. We do not need to wait until 2011 to modernize our taxes.
Who among us has not bought food, clothing, a car, an electronic gadget, or SOMETHING if not many, many things during the past year? If this is a consumer-oriented society (which I think it is), everybody's still buyin'. Internet and mail order sales are way up and they are slipping under the taxman's net, but this could be fixed if the will was there. Sure, there are opportunities to tax more services; this is correctly viewed as robbing Peter to pay Paul, as the consumer will have less disposable income after paying the service tax to pay for consumable and durable goods (unless the service providers cut their rates to equalize the end price).
inept spending practices, run away salary and pension benefits and an idiot
executive decided one day to tax people based on the amount of knowledge in
their brain. As a starting point, the strong willed Governor with an 84%
approval rating decided that Google had siphoned away the money from the good
high paying jobs of his constituents and thought, why not tax on Google each
time our resident’s found something?
He declared God was on his side in this debate, “because
clearly, as a society, we’ve become less productive and found that there a worse
life for people since Google became ubiquitous.†Rather than tell people,
that the future was in developing services to complement Google or inventing the
next new thing, he called the developers and owners names like 'evil-doers' and
'fat-cats.'
The people bought into the rhetoric.
The result was the dire state became the dark state and
was the only spot on Earth where you couldn’t Google.
While I respect the position of trying to look at the
taxing issue we have in this state and country, the fact is a tax on service
becomes a tax on knowledge. The reason you have someone perform a service for
you, is that they can do it better, faster i.e. productive than you can. Thus a
tax on services is a tax on specialization and knowledge, and the quest for
increased productivity.
The argument is made that lawyers, bankers, architects and
yes, even journalists, don’t have to pay taxes and as such have a free ride. In
today’s economy ask yourself, where are the high paying jobs and where does the
future lie? Will Illinois’ have a larger tax base if we have scores of lawyers,
or whatever profession that has yet to be created, coming to or flocking in our
state?
We can choose to incentive brining knowledge into the state
or we can choose to penalize those with the most knowledge and the ability to be
productive. Maybe we could slap a graduation tax on all those smart-e-pants
college graduates who will go perform work in a service sector job, after all
they are the one’s really cheating the system. Don’t forget those professors
too; you can tax them on a per pupil basis.
The sales tax is fair, no matter who you are you pay and no
matter who you are, you pay the same rate. The same isn’t so for property tax
or income tax. If anything we should be discussing raising the income tax,
after all it’s low, after we talk about raising the sales tax.
You want the income tax to create more revenue for the
state, stop taxing businesses and get them to move and expand here!
The problem with the current tax system is that it doesn’t take the growing wage gap into account and fails to progressively tax at any level–local, state, national.
The rich are getting away with murder in the tax sense.
--------------
When people talk about taxing the rich I always wonder what their definition of rich is. I suspect they think of it in terms of some multiple of their income. After all, everything is relative. I am curious as to whether that multiple is consistent across all income levels. Hey Rich (Miller that is) how about starting a thread on this issue.
I fail to see where the rich she refers to are getting away with anything. As pointed out earlier in this thread the top 5% pay 57% of the income taxes in the country. So what case of murder are you talking about?
The irresponsible thing about adding taxes to Illinois is that there is no spending reform. The excesses of staffing , compensation and pensions will continue unabated and consume any new revenue in a heartbeat.
Lets get away from the politics of envy and reform how we spend our money before we raise the taxes.
The scary part of who pays taxes is that the 50% who pay the 3% already get more in services than they pay. What is their incentive for reigning in spending? As far as they are concerned more governmental programs are free...... of ourse they will vote for more free stuff.
How do you know I'm not one of the favored one?
One's views of the tax system are not necessarily a function of one's income or "envy."
Way too simplistic.
Would you pay 10% more for a carwash, or wash it yourself?
There are lots of services that should be taxed, and if you don't want to pay the tax, you don't have to.