Tax Foundation: Taxation plays direct, indirect role in 2021 population
shift
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[January 18, 2022]
By Bethany Blankley
(The Center Square) – As
more Americans move to lower-taxed Republican-led states, a new report
by the Tax Foundation indicates that taxation levels play a direct and
indirect role as factors contributing to migration patterns.
Taxes often “play an indirect role by contributing to a broadly
favorable economic environment. And sometimes, of course, they play
little or no role,” Jared Walczak, a vice president at the Tax
Foundation, writes in an analysis of 2021 U.S. Census Bureau data and
inbound and outbound migration data published by U-Haul and United Van
Lines.
“The Census data and these industry studies cannot tell us exactly why
each person moved, but there is no denying a very strong correlation
between low-tax, low-cost states and population growth,” he wrote. “With
many states responding to robust revenues and heightened state
competition by cutting taxes, moreover, these trends may only get
larger.”
While the overall U.S. population grew last year by
only 0.1%, the lowest rate since the nation’s founding, regional
differences show population grew in certain parts of the country where
taxes are lower, and regions with higher tax rates saw population
declines.
The South accounted for the greatest percentage of the population growth
last year of 38.3%, with most lower-cost-of-living southern states
reporting population increases. Northeast states reported the least
percentage of the population growth last year, and experienced the
greatest exodus of residents.
Six states in the top third reporting population increases levy no
personal state income taxes: Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South
Dakota, Tennessee and Texas.
States with the highest overall taxes saw the greatest population
declines: New York, Illinois and California.
Nine states that saw the most population increases last year either
implemented or enacted individual or corporate income tax cuts in 2021.
New York, which reported a population loss and is a top outmigration
state, was the only state to increase its income tax last year.
“The picture painted by this population shift is a clear one of people
leaving high-tax, high-cost states for lower-tax, lower-cost
alternatives,” Walczak wrote. “The individual income tax is only one
component of overall tax burdens, but it is often highly salient, and is
illustrative here.”
In the top one-third of states reporting population growth from April
2020 to July 2021, he noted, “the average combined top marginal state
and local income tax rate is 3.5 percent, while in the bottom third of
states, it is about 7.3 percent.”
Census Bureau data found that, “Between 2020 and 2021,
33 states saw population increases and 17 states and the District of
Columbia lost population, 11 of which had losses of over 10,000 people,
a historically large number of states to lose population in a year.”
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States with the greatest percentage increase in
population were Idaho, Utah, Montana, Arizona, South Carolina,
Delaware, Texas, Nevada, Florida and North Carolina, the Census
Bureau reported.
States with the greatest percentage decrease were New York,
Illinois, Hawaii, California, Louisiana, Massachusetts, West
Virginia, North Dakota, Mississippi, and Pennsylvania.
United Van Lines listed New Jersey as the top
outmigration state for the fourth year in a row last year, and
Vermont as its top inbound state for movers. U-Haul listed
California as its top outmigration state and Texas as its top
inbound migration state for movers last year.
The six counties with the highest median property tax bills in
fiscal 2019 were in New York and New Jersey, states that have led
the nation in outbound migration.
All six levy property taxes that exceed $10,000 a year: Bergen,
Essex, and Union counties in New Jersey and Nassau, Rockland, and
Westchester counties in New York, according to a Tax Foundation
analysis of FY2019 data.
Even though more people have left California for Texas over the past
few years, and California reported a population decline compared to
Texas’ population increase in 2020, in Fiscal Year 2019, the highest
median property taxes in Texas were higher than those in California.
In the Midwest, Lake County, Illinois, had the
highest median property taxes, averaging more than $7,500 a year,
with several adjacent counties not far behind, according to the
analysis.
The New England states of Connecticut, New Hampshire and
Massachusetts also had some of the highest median property taxes in
the nation.
And while more people are moving to or live in the south and pay
lower property taxes compared to residents of northern states, they
pay some of the highest state and local sales tax rates in the U.S.
As of July 2021, four of the five states with the highest average
combined state and local sales tax rates were in the south:
Louisiana (9.55%), Tennessee (9.547%), Arkansas (9.48%), Washington
(9.29%), and Alabama (9.22%), according to a separate Tax Foundation
analysis.
Five states with the lowest average combined state and local sales
tax rates were Alaska (1.76%), Hawaii (4.44%), Wyoming (5.39%),
Wisconsin (5.43%), and Maine (5.50%), according to the analysis.
Last year, five states had no statewide sales tax: Alaska, Delaware,
Montana, New Hampshire and Oregon. Alaska allows localities to
charge local sales taxes.
California has the highest state-level sales tax rate of 7.25%. Four
states aren’t that far behind with a rate of 7 percent: Indiana,
Mississippi, Rhode Island, and Tennessee. Colorado has the lowest
state-level sales tax of 2.9%.
States with the highest average local government sales taxes last
year were Alabama (5.22%), Louisiana (5.10%), Colorado (4.82%), New
York (4.52%), and Oklahoma (4.45%). |