Mike Sauter for 247WallSt. writes: As the deadline for tax season approaches, the residents of seven states
are going to have one less thing to worry about than the rest of the
country. People who live and file taxes in these states will have to pay
no state income tax, something that can cost upwards of a thousand dollars in other states. While personal income tax is usually the largest source of tax-based
revenue for states, there are other sources of revenue. Some of the
states without income tax make up for the revenue they are missing
through sales and corporate taxes. Other states simply spend less on
services to keep a balanced budget. Using recently released tax
collection numbers for 2011 from the Tax Foundation, 24/7 Wall St.
reviewed the seven states where residents do not pay income tax.
In several of these states, the lower revenue from income tax is made
up for in other ways. Alaska and Wyoming, neither of which charge a personal income tax, actually had the first- and third-highest tax revenue per capita, respectively, in 2011. In the case of Alaska, this is in large part due to the corporate
income taxes it raises from the natural resources sector. The state
collected more than $1,000 in corporate taxes per capita in 2011. No
other state collected more than $450, and the average state collected
just $129. In the case of Wyoming, the state collects the third-highest
revenue per capita from sales tax.
Other states, however, are not offsetting the lower revenue from a
lack of income tax with other taxes. Florida, Nevada and Texas are all
among the bottom five states for revenue per capita. Because of their
below-average revenue, spending in these states is particularly low. In
2011, state spending per capita was the fourth lowest in the country in
Nevada, fifth lowest in Texas and the lowest in Florida — $4,441,
compared to a national average of $6,427 per capita.
In the states with no income tax to maintain solid revenue, like
Alaska and Wyoming, spending is — not surprisingly — quite high. Wyoming
spent $9,986 per capita in 2011, the second highest in the country.
Alaska spent $15,663, by far the most of any state.
Joseph Henchman, Vice President of Legal and State Projects at the
Tax Foundation, explained that the trend of low revenue states spending
less is not a product of a deliberate choice by these states to operate
under a conservative budget. In states like Texas, Florida and Nevada,
Henchman said in an interview with 24/7 Wall St., “The decision to have a
frugal government probably came before the decision to have a lower tax system.” Unlike Alaska and Wyoming, these states have chosen to spend little per capita, and so tax less as a result.
To find the seven states that do not tax income, 24/7 Wall St.
studied data provided by the Tax Foundation. These states do not tax
wages earned by individuals, nor do they tax interest and dividend
payments. Tax rates are the most recently available, and were provided
by the Tax Foundation from its Facts and Figures 2013 report. Tax
collection figures are from 2011, as are effective property tax rates. Figures on state expenditure are from the U.S. Census Bureau’s State Government Finances Summary: 2011.
1. Alaska
> Tax collections per capita: $7,708 (the highest)
> State revenue per capita: $17,630 (the highest)
> State spending per capita: $15,663 (the highest)
> Federal aid as a pct. of revenue: 24.0% (the lowest)
> State sales tax rate: N/A
Despite having no income tax, Alaska actually collected more in taxes
per capita than any other state, at $7,708 in fiscal 2011. Because it
raised so much in taxes, Alaska had the highest per capita government
expenditure of any state in the U.S. during 2011, exceeding $15,000.
Additionally, while the state has no individual income tax,
it did have the nation’s largest corporate income tax collections,
$1,003 per capita. This was more than twice any other state. Tax
collections from oil companies operating in the state are currently so high that Governor Sean Parnell is considering lowering taxes to promote increased production.
2. Florida
> Tax collections per capita: $1,718 (7th lowest)
> State revenue per capita: $3,974 (3rd lowest)
> State spending per capita: $4,441 (the lowest)
> Federal aid as a pct. of revenue: 36.9% (23rd highest)
> State sales tax rate: 6.00% (16th highest)
In 2011, Florida brought in just $3,974 in revenue per resident, the
third lowest of all states. Since revenue was lower than most, spending
was also. Total expenditures per capita in 2011 was just $4,441, the
lowest of all 50 states. That year, just $1,306 per capita was spent on
education, among the lowest in the country. In 2011, under the
leadership of Governor Rick Scott, the budget was cut further in areas like education and child welfare. Yet in February the Governor introduced a new budget
of more than $74 billion that includes pay raises for teachers and
state workers and expands health care services for the disabled.
3. Nevada
> Tax collections per capita: $2,333 (25th lowest)
> State revenue per capita: $3,848 (2nd lowest)
> State spending per capita: $4,848 (4th lowest)
> Federal aid as a pct. of revenue: 27.1% (5th lowest)
> State sales tax rate: 6.85% (8th highest)
At 0.90% of assessed home value, Nevada’s effective property tax rate
for 2011 was just below the national average of 1.12%. But after the
housing crisis caused property values to tumble, local budgets have been
strained by the loss of property taxes.
This is especially troubling in a state with no income tax. The state’s
revenues totaled just $3,848 per capita in 2011, less than all but one
state. This was partly because it received less in government revenues
than all but four others, at just over 27% in 2011. Additionally, as one
of the nation’s most frugal spenders, Nevada did not need to raise much
money. As of 2011, no state spent less on public welfare than Nevada’s
$781 per capita.
4. South Dakota
> Tax collections per capita: $1,682 (3rd lowest)
> State revenue per capita: $5,028 (18th lowest)
> State spending per capita: $5,459 (10th lowest)
> Federal aid as a pct. of revenue: 45.6% (4th highest)
> State sales tax rate: 4.00% (tied for 2nd lowest)
South Dakota only collected $1,682 in taxes per capita in 2011, lower
than all but two states. Due to lower tax collections, the state had
lower spending on government programs. In 2011, expenditures per capita
were just $5,459, significantly less than the $6,427 spent on average by
all states across the country. Education expenditures were just $1,578,
the eighth lowest of all states and well below the $1,901 spent per
capita across the U.S. South Dakota was also more deeply indebted than
most states — debt per capita was $4,321, in the top third of all
states.
5. Texas
> Tax collections per capita: $1,696 (6th lowest)
> State revenue per capita: $4,209 (5th lowest)
> State spending per capita: $4,905 (5th lowest)
> Federal aid as a pct. of revenue: 40.0% (11th highest)
> State sales tax rate: 6.25% (13th highest)
Living in Texas can be light on the pocketbook. In addition to having
no personal income tax, the cost of living in Texas was the seventh
lowest in the country in the fourth quarter of 2012. The median
household income in Texas in 2011 was $49,392, slightly lower than the
$50,502 nationwide. Government spending in 2011 was just $4,905 per
resident, the fifth lowest of all states. The state’s austerity in
recent years may be showing signs of loosening, however. Texas
legislators are writing a budget that beefs up spending in areas such as public schools and mental health, which have taken a beating in recent years.
6. Washington
> Tax collections per capita: $2,566 (19th highest)
> State revenue per capita: $5,156 (20th lowest)
> State spending per capita: $6,735 (24th highest)
> Federal aid as a pct. of revenue: 31.3% (10th lowest)
> State sales tax rate: 6.50% (10th highest)
With no income tax, Washington relied heavily on its 6.5% sales tax,
the nation’s 10th highest rate. This tactic has worked in the past: in
2011 the state raised $1,559 in sales tax revenue per resident, more
than nearly all other states. This accounted for the majority of the
$2,566 in taxes collected by the state that year. Localities often
depend on the sales tax for revenue as well: the average local sales tax
paid by a Washington resident is nearly 2.4%, bringing the total sales
tax rate to nearly 9% — fourth highest in the United States. Although
sales taxes are often considered to be especially costly for the poor, Washington makes up for this by having the nation’s highest minimum wage, at $9.19 an hour. It is also one of the nation’s stronger states for education spending, at $2,180 per capita in 2011.
7. Wyoming
> Tax collections per capita: $4,347 (3rd highest)
> State revenue per capita: $10,694 (2nd highest)
> State spending per capita: $9,986 (2nd highest)
> Federal aid as a pct. of revenue: 39.6% (12th highest)
> State sales tax rate: 4.00% (tied for 2nd lowest)
Wyoming, in addition to not collecting any individual income taxes,
is one of just four states that does not collect any corporate income
tax. This has made it the most business-friendly state in the country
for taxes, according to the Tax Foundation. Nevertheless, Wyoming has no
problem collecting revenue compared to most of the other states. It
generated $10,694 in revenue per capita in 2011, higher than all states
except Alaska. As a large energy producer, the state is able to garner oil production taxes.
Moreover, Wyoming generated $1,523 in state sales tax collections in
2011, higher than all but two other states. Expenditure per capita in
2011 was $9,986 the second highest of all states.
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
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