This week, you elected your representatives to the 96th General Assembly and there is no doubt they will be faced with extraordinary economic times. Missouri’s past two state fiscal years have seen major revenue declines of -6.9% ($585 million) in 2009 and -9.1% ($676 million) in 2010 and next year our state faces a projected budget deficit of possibly $900 million. With Missouri’s economic circumstances, now is the time to take a long look at where we are, where we are going, and what must be done to ensure that your tax dollars are used effectively and efficiently.
This is an opportunity to reshape state government to behave exactly as you and other Missourians are; looking carefully at their budgets to see where their money is going and how they can balance their finances. The bottom line is, you are making less and spending less. And just as you are finding ways to live within your means, Missouri’s government should do the same.
In my opinion, one area in need of reform is tax credits. Tax credits are one of Missouri’s economic development and social engineering tools. The state offers many tax credits for a diverse list of causes, including historic preservation, low-income housing, livestock breeding, job development, and on and on. If you can name it, there is probably a tax credit for it. Tax credits are an indirect appropriation of tax payer dollars to another and have grown by 266 percent in the last eleven years in large part because there is no oversight and accountability in how these tax credits are issued.
Last year alone, $521.5 million in tax credits were redeemed and budget experts predict that number to increase to $698.4 million this year. This explosion in tax credits has created an unfunded (issued but yet redeemed) tax credit liability to you of $1.5 to 2 billion. To put it in perspective, in SFY 2009, Missouri was first in the nation for historic preservation tax credits ($186 million) and second for low-income housing tax credits ($106 million). Yet, Missouri was 45th in per capita funding of higher education and 32nd in per capita funding for K-12.
I believe we must change our use of tax credits and I am calling for fundamental reform. All tax credits should be required to be approved like every other state expenditure of your tax dollars; through the appropriations process.
The appropriations process is where Missourians, through their elected representatives, have the ability to decide their priorities. By treating tax credits just like every other state expenditure, the General Assembly could weigh the benefit of a tax dollar spent on a credit against other state services. In this process, advocates of their tax credits will have to present their case why your tax dollars should fund tax credits over say education or access to healthcare; now they don’t because tax credits come off the top as entitlements.
I believe that you put in the hard work and therefore the money you earn is yours; not the government’s. Therefore, government needs to be fully accountable for taxpayer dollars and the new General Assembly needs to take this opportunity to scrutinize how state government is spending your hard earned money. In this environment, as you are painstakingly prioritizing where you spend your limited amount of money, so too should your state government.
This blog features observations from Randy Turner, a former teacher, newspaper reporter and editor. Send news items or comments to rturner229@hotmail.com
Thursday, November 04, 2010
Crowell: it's time to look at eliminating tax credits
In his latest Crowell Connection, Sen. Jason Crowell, R-Cape Girardeau, says it is time to do something about the increasing amount of the state budget that is used for tax credits:
Wish they'd also look at removing sales tax exemptions for farmers, non-profits & churches. This area is tremendously abused.
ReplyDeleteAMEN to Crowell and 12:26
ReplyDeleteFarber and Neff in Neosho are sure not going to want to hear this! There goes their plans to renovate the square into a residential subdivision. Oh wait, too late but may slow them down in the future.
ReplyDelete