NTF
Issue Paper: Taxplan18. 11-04.
NEBRASKA TAXPAYERS FOR FREEDOM
ISSUE PAPER:
NEBRASKA BUSINESS TAX CLIMATE IS POOR.
BACKGROUND.
Tax freedom day for businesses in 2000 was August 27.
Companies paid almost twice as much in total taxes as they kept in net
income after taxes in 1999. Tax
freedom day for businesses is far later in the year than for individuals who pay
income taxes, on April 25.1
Businesses, too, need tax relief. Besides
income taxes, they pay payroll taxes, property taxes, sales taxes, worker
compensation taxes, unemployment insurance taxes, insurance taxes, import duties
of $18 million annually, fuel taxes, and utility taxes.
BUSINESS
TAX COMPARISONS. Businesses
examine the overall tax climate of a state when scouting places to locate
subsidiaries, branches, new plants, etc. The
Small Business Survival Committee has ranked Nebraska 34th out of 51 (1st
being highest) in its ranking of business tax climates in the 50 states and
Washington, D.C.2
This gauge measures and compares how state governments treat small
businesses and entrepreneurs. In our increasingly mobile and competitive national economy,
differences in state government-imposed costs of conducting business make a
large difference between whether a state grows or declines economically.
Our personal income tax, its top rate higher than that in Missouri, Iowa,
South Dakota, and Wyoming, raises the cost of working, saving, investing, and
taking risks. The NE maximum income
tax rate is 7.81%, higher than all neighboring states except Iowa.
Over 90% of businesses file personal income taxes rather than corporate
income taxes. Our capital gains
tax, its top rate higher than that of Missouri, South Dakota, and Wyoming, is a
direct levy on investment and ideas, the originators of economic growth.
High capital gains taxes restrict access to capital and quash or direct
elsewhere the risk-taking. Our
corporate income tax, its top rate (7.81%), higher than that of Missouri,
Kansas, South Dakota, and Colorado (Wyoming has no corporate income tax), spurns
investment and location in our state.3
Our property tax, its rate higher than that in Kansas, Missouri, Iowa,
and South Dakota, has influenced businesses to locate elsewhere because of the
onerous burden on transferees who would move to Nebraska residences.
Nebraskans pay higher state sales taxes than residents in all 6
neighboring states.4
The combined maximum rate is 7%. Our sales tax per $100 of personal income,
higher than that in Iowa, serves as a disincentive to vigorous economic
activity. Nebraska businesses pay
higher fuel excise taxes on their company vehicles than businesses in all 6
neighboring states.5
Kansas, Missouri, and Wyoming limit their death taxes to the federal
pick-up credit. Nebraska adds more
to this tax beyond the federal tax. Families
pay taxes on business income over lifetimes, then face a tax on total assets of
a company at the time of owner death. Our
tax climate forces wasteful expenditures on tax avoidance, estate planning, and
insurance and forces many businesses to leave family hands or face closure or
borrowing. Our health insurance tax
rate is higher than that in Wyoming. It
raises the cost of insurance further, increasing the number of uninsured
workers, and poses another disincentive to starting or locating a business here.
Our state and local tax burden ranking is 13th of 51 states
and D.C. Of the surrounding states,
Kansas is next highest at 21st.6
All surrounding states offer tax incentives to businesses to expand and
locate operations in their states, so NE must compete against these states,
other states, and foreign nations.7
NE has more government bureaucrats at the state and local level per 100
population than Missouri, Kansas, Iowa, and South Dakota.
Streamlining and consolidation/merger would make our government run more
efficiently. The more regulators, the more regulations, which raise the
cost of conducting business.
SMALL
MANUFACTURERS. Rural
Nebraska has many family owned small manufacturers that each employs about 12
people and had gross sales of about $5 million in 2004.
Total state taxes after credits, refunds, and abatements show that, in
comparison to adjacent states, NE has the 2nd highest franchise,
property, and sales taxes. Urban NE
also has many family owned small manufacturers that each employs about 12 people
and had gross sales of about $5 million in 2004.
Total state taxes after credits, refunds, and abatements show that, in
comparison to adjacent states, NE has the 2nd highest franchise,
income, sales, and property taxes.8
PERSONAL
DISINCENTIVES. The
estimated tax burden of major taxes in large cities for a family of 4 earning
$25,000 finds Omaha at 7.2% of income, lower only than Des Moines and Kansas
City, MO. At $50,000 income, the
Omaha burden is 8.4% of income, again lower only than Des Moines and Kansas
City, MO. At $75,000 income,
Omahans pay 9.4% of income, lower only than Des Moines.
At $100,000 income, Omahans pay 9.7% of income, lower only than Des
Moines. At $150,000 income, Omahans
pay 10.3% of income, lower only than Des Moines.1
Comparing NE total income and property taxes paid by company executives
with adjacent states, NE ranks 2nd behind Iowa.
Comparing NE total income and property taxes paid by CEOs with adjacent
states, NE ranks 2nd behind Iowa.1
Note that key execs consider personal financial impact while deliberating
on business location and expansion decisions.
TAX
EXEMPTION FOUL. The
abuse of the tax exempt status in Nebraska has financially placed private
enterprises in non-competitive positions. Tax
exempt entities pay no taxes, no matter how high the taxes climb or how many
facilities. For example, the YMCA
has announced plans to build a new facility in Valley, NE., housing a gym,
health and wellness area, and natatorium with combination leisure and lap pool. Upon completion, this facility will become the 7th
YMCA branch in the Omaha Metro area, offering activities that directly compete
with private health centers and gyms. The
$4.7 million dollar center on 45 acres will pay no property taxes locally or
state corporate income taxes. Private
establishments offering the same or similar services do pay local and
state taxes; in addition, they subsidize these tax exempt centers.
Private companies thus face unfair competition for their profits, and
communities that host tax exempt facilities drive out or keep out private
competitors.
CONCLUSION.
NE cannot compete with surrounding states without tax
incentives, and we must simplify the administrative and reporting requirements
needed to obtain such incentives. NE
should join the many states that permit local governments to negotiate property
tax abatements with businesses.
SUGGESTIONS.
We suggest that all companies publicize their tax
burdens by posting in their annual reports and in their advertising their taxes
per share of stock compared with earnings per share and total amounts of taxes
by category per year. Grand totals
of taxes should appear in bold lettering. Companies
should figure in costs of government regulations and costs to comply with the
myriad of tax laws. Remember that
businesses must collect personal income taxes from employees and excise and
sales taxes from customers. They should compare the overall burden of taxes to their
operating revenues. Shareholders
pay the price of high business taxes. In
2000, the federal government received more than shareholders from companies.
Thus, shareholders should press management to collect and report this
confiscatory tax information. Business
leaders and business owners must become actively involved in the NTF
network project to lobby and monitor our state senators to lower personal and
business taxes and to cut wasteful spending instead.
Email us, call
(402) 551-0921, or write NTF, P.O. Box. 6452, Omaha, NE. 68106-0452.
Research, analysis, and documentation for this issue paper done by Doug Kagan and Lee Mimms. This material copyrighted by Nebraska Taxpayers for Freedom, with express prior permission granted for its use by Taxwatchers, Inc., Citizens for Local Control, Cherry County Taxpayers, Dawes County Taxpayers, and other groups in the Tax Freedom Network. 11-04. C
1
Tax Foundation 2002.
2 Small Business Survival Comm. 9-2000.
3 Tax Administration 2002.
4 Tax Administration 2002.
5 Tax Administration 2002.
6 Tax Foundation 2002.
7 Site Selection Magazine, November 2002.
8 KPMG NE Tax & Business Incentive Report, 2004.
1 District of Columbia CFO Report, 8-02.
1 KPMG NE Tax & Business Incentive Report, 2004.