TAX TALK: If lower taxes don’t create jobs, how can higher taxes help?
“It matters, particularly for small businesses, to invest in education,”
said Ralph Martire, who heads the Center for Tax and Budget
Accountability. “Small businesses hire primarily from the local labor
market. They need their local schools to produce quality workers with
literacy and numeracy skills.”
Martie says Illinois cannot pay more for education if the state rolls
back the 2011 “temporary” tax.
It’s less than surprising that Martire supports a tax increase for more
school spending. Illinois’ major labor unions have funded the CTBA, and
many union leaders sit on the group’s board of directors.
Martire argues that most businesses in Illinois do not need the
corporate tax relief that would come by allowing the 2011 “temporary”
tax to expire.
“Most businesses don’t pay the corporate income tax at all,” Martire
said at the statehouse Monday. “The vast majority of businesses in
Illinois that file an income tax return, almost 70 percent, paid $0 in
corporate income taxes … Only 5 percent of all businesses in Illinois
have corporate tax liabilities exceeding $10,000.”
Martire said more businesses in Illinois would be helped by property tax
cuts, not by corporate income tax relief.
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MORE SPENDING, NOT FEWER TAXES: Martire — unsurprisingly
— says more spending is the answer to stagnant job creation.
But Kim Clarke Maisch, Illinois state director of the National
Federation of Independent Businesses, said, “Taking money away from
people who create jobs, however that happens, is not going to create
jobs.”
Maish said Martire’s study completely ignores the reality that most
small businesses file taxes under the personal income tax structure,
which could raise the tax rate for small businesses to almost 10
percent.
“While lowering taxes, in his opinion, doesn’t create jobs,” Maisch
said. “Raising taxes certainly doesn’t create jobs, either.”
Maisch said if Martire, or the big labor unions that support him,
want to have a “fundamental discussion about tax policy,” then she’s
all in.
But Maisch said Illinois would then have to look at workers’
compensation reforms, tort reforms and other aspects of job creation
that Illinois’ labor unions have long fought.
[This
article courtesy of
Illinois Watchdog.]
Contact Benjamin Yount at
Ben@IllinoisWatchdog.org and find him
on Twitter:
@BenYount.
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