This week's agreement is going to take $350 million from state
coffers annually through tax incentives for businesses and
households as Illinois is struggling to chip away at a $15 billion
deficit. The tax relief has "reduced revenue to the state, ...
which makes the problem we have down the road even worse," said Kent
Redfield, a political professor at the University of Illinois at
Springfield.
During the past decade, Illinois regularly spent more than it
generated in revenue. Lawmakers and Gov. Pat Quinn slowly have been
rolling back that practice.
Part of the effort was the temporary income tax hikes of 67
percent for individuals and 47 percent for businesses, passed in
January. Those increases are expected to generate $7 billion
annually until they expire at the end of 2014.
However, this revenue runs up against other financial pressures
facing the state. Illinois' payment to its five pension funds is
going up next year by $1 billion, from $4.9 billion to $5.9 billion.
Medicaid costs are projected to increase as well.
Despite these perils, the state's finances can move from sickly
to healthy by the time the income tax expires at the end of 2014,
Redfield said.
"If we make major cuts and trim our spending and devote all of
the tax increase to paying bills, we can just about get back to
even," Redfield said.
The temporary tax increase was approved with only Democratic
votes. The political dynamic in the Statehouse could be different in
2014. Lawmakers who voted in 2010 to raise the income tax might not
support more taxes, Redfield said.
Lawmakers say they're not oblivious to the fiscal challenges
ahead.
"We had a long, free ride where we were doing things we shouldn't
have done from a spending standpoint and enhancing benefits
standpoint -- the list goes on and on. Those days are over," said
Illinois House Minority Leader Rep. Tom Cross, R-Oswego.
State Rep. John Bradley, D-Marion, who helped negotiate the tax
breaks this week, said lawmakers are evaluating the state's tax
code.
"We're going to have a lot of issues to deal with at that point,"
said Bradley, who is chairman of the Illinois House Revenue and
Finance Committee.
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State Sen. Kirk Dillard, R-Hinsdale, agreed. "This state needs
comprehensive tax reform. Our tax code needs to be updated. It needs
to have something done to it," Dillard said.
Neither he nor Bradley would offer any specifics as to what those
changes might be.
State Sen. Kwame Raoul, D-Chicago, suggested Tuesday the state
look at making its income tax progressive -- the more a person
makes, the more he pays. Doing that would require a constitutional
amendment since income tax is prescribed in the state's
constitution.
This isn't the first time Illinois has had a temporary tax
increase.
Former Republican Gov. Jim Thompson signed a temporary increase
in the late 1980s. That increase became permanent under former
Republican Gov. Jim Edgar in the early 1990s. The 3 percent tax rate
held until January, when it jumped to 5 percent.
The situations surrounding the state's finances in the early
1990s and the most recent income tax increase are different. In the
1990s, the state had a $2 billion deficit. Before the most recent
income tax increase, the state was facing a $15 billion deficit.
[Illinois
Statehouse News; By ANDREW THOMASON]
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