Posted on 08/24/2011 7:29:27 PM PDT by dragnet2
In Rick Perrys August 13 presidential announcement speech in South Carolina the Texas Governor stated:
. we have led Texas based on some just really pretty simple guiding principles. One is dont spend all of the money. Two is keeping the taxes low and under control. Three is you have your regulatory climate fair and predictable.
Later in his speech he claimed:
Ive cut taxes. I have delivered historic property tax reductions. I was the first governor since World War II to cut general revenue spending in our state budget.
But Perrys record on taxes reveals something entirely different. Especially for Texas businesses, where things are far from fair and predictable.
On May 18, 2006 Perry signed into law a Business Margin Tax that dramatically changed the way businesses are taxed in Texas. The Dallas Morning News (DMN) May 16, 2006 called it the largest tax increase in Texas. The paper continued,
In 2006, the state was facing a judicial mandate to change the unconstitutional way it funded public schools, mostly through property taxes. Under Perry's leadership, a tax swap was created that cut school property taxes by up to one-third. To pay for that, Perry signed a bill that nearly tripled the amount Texas collects from businesses. The tax swap created a net tax decrease, but the new business tax coupled with one added to tobacco still counts as the largest tax increase in Texas.
Crafted to replace the Texas Franchise Tax, it was explained by Harper and Pearson, a CPA firm in Houston, Texas, as a tax on taxable margin, which is a concept similar to taxable income. Generally, an entitys taxable margin is its revenue as reported on its federal income tax return less either its cost of goods sold or its compensation expense (limited to $300,000 per employee), but not both. But there was widespread confusion over how the law permitted the calculation of cost of goods sold and which expenses were considered.
And Texas Conservative Review (TCR) echoed the DMN, adding,
[W]hat really irks conservatives is a business would have to pay taxes whether it made a profit or not. In that way, it is worse than a corporate income tax. The non-partisan Tax Foundation in 2006 described gross receipts taxes as poor tax policy that lead to harmful tax pyramiding, distort companies [sic] structures, and damage the performance of state and local economies. The tax was sold as a "trade-off" for lower property taxes. This is a recurring myth that never works
In other words, critics say, its the same as having an income tax. Which is prohibited by the Texas Constitution that the Governor has sworn to uphold.
TCR continued,
It's hard to believe but the Texas Gross Receipts (Margins) Tax on business proposed by a Republican, Governor Perry, and passed by a GOP dominated legislature in 2006 was further complicated in 2007. This was the largest tax increase in Texas history, which requires business to pay up to 10% of its gross income to the state while large corporations were given loopholes.
And Texas Representative Gary Elkins (R) wrote,
I cast a "no" vote today on HB 3 for a number of significant reasons. First, this bill calls for the imposition of nothing less than an income tax on Texas business owners a gross net receipts tax. Texas has a long-standing tradition of paying our way as we go. Given the substantial and ever-growing budget surplus, it is unconscionable to burden Texans with a new tax when we can simply use their money to meet the mandate imposed on us by the Texas Supreme Court.
He explained the effect on business like this:
this new tax will have the effect of punishing many businesses that have unexpected expenses. For example, a service company that has a gross revenue of $1 million and payroll expenses of half a million dollars will pay a new income (franchise) tax of 1 percent on $500,000, or $5,000. Suppose that this company was frivolously sued and spent half a million dollars defending itself. This company would likely sustain a net operating loss in the year that it was sued but would nevertheless owe the State of Texas a franchise tax on income that was never realized. In addition, HB 3 does not take into consideration the numerous other expenses that are not related to payroll. For example, rent, phones, advertising, maintenance contracts on business equipment, casualty insurance, key man insurance, property taxes on real estate and business equipment, bank interest on notes, lease payments on equipment, occupancy taxes, filing fees, and a myriad of other expenses are not deductible under this new tax scheme.
He closed by adding,
The governors own policy advisor has informed members of the house that the average small service sector business will pay more in taxes and in most cases double, triple, or even quadruple what they are currently paying under the current franchise tax system.
The Houston Chronicle also argued that the tax is unconstitutional because the Texas Constitution requires a statewide vote in order to pass an income tax on individuals including income they receive from partnerships that Perrys tax was enacted without a vote of the people, and that it taxes partnerships. The article noted astute law student Nikki Laings observation that just because the law declares itself not to be an income tax doesnt make it so. She cited a number of U.S. Supreme Court decisions on the point, including one that said 'the mere declaration contained in a statute that it shall be regarded as a tax of a particular character does not make it such if it is apparent that it cannot be so designated consistently with the meaning and effect of the act.'"
Critics note that particularly unfair is the feature that businesses are taxed differently according to their classifications. According to a February 6 article in the Houston Chronicle, for example, businesses such as independently owned auto repair shops are taxed twice as much as, say, a dealership or franchise store, for the same services.
Beginning in 2012, the exemption from the tax falls from $1 million in revenue to $600,000, but it is uncertain whether that exemption will be extended.
The Tax Foundations evaluation of the measure is this:
With the Texas margin tax collecting far less in revenue than expected, causing significant confusion and compliance costs, resulting in significant litigation and controversy over "cost of goods sold" definitions, and facing calls for substantial overhaul and even repeal, it should not be used as a model tax reform for any other state.
ha ha ha. Give it up, people. First, any freeper quoting the Dallas Morning News is grasping at straws. Second, the statement above invalidates the entire premise. Third, following this policy change, the sea of businesses moving TO Texas increased dramatically, so it has to be pretty favorable to businesses.
Forbes Magazine from March of this year says:
Texas, for instance, lacks a state income tax, an omission it touts far and wide in its economic development efforts. But the Lone Star State more than makes up for that with a hefty sales tax and the nations third-highest property tax (measured as a percent of fair market value). These taxes are not touted far and wide.
Result: Texas ranks only in the middle on tax burden.
Posted nothing but lies and half truths from Left Wing blogs , Soros 501c3’s etc... .
The clown would never respond when
confronted what would happen if Brown WON and the Dem controlled everything !
He just astroturfed away.
He is very scared of Perry winning.
Because YOUR candidate is a weak RINO?
Because YOUR candidate Ordered Gardasil by Mandate?
Because YOUR candidate supported the DREAM act and open borders?
Get it together.
Normy
I am a native Texan and I too own a business.
My taxes did not go up and business is great for us as well.
Quiet...we don’t talk about Perry’s HUGE tax increase. We might lose our lusting for him if we do.
Perry cut 23 billion.
Just another bias bs article from a lefty outfit...what a shame...our side has to use a bs article to fight there own side. Why am I not surprised....this is a left tactic and the right seems to be easily sucked into doing whatever the left desires. They’re are their backrooms laughing their A’s off.
Alaska is a big and wonderful state. I love it and have family there.
But you cannot compare 700,000 population to over 25 million living in Texas.
The Gardasil was not mandated - there was an online opt out.
Besides the fact that it never went into effect.
Perry is not for open borders.
Gov Palin supports Perry. She endorsed him when he was running for Governor.
You denied that FACT and mocked those facts.
Your another so Called phony “CONCERNED “ poster who posts left wing blogs and Soros 501c3 propaganda !
You also posted non stop trashing Meg Whitman when she was up against Radical Moonbeam Brown .
Now the Dem control everything in CA . Are you happy ? You are real scared that Perry will beat exactly WHO???
Who do you really support ?
Apparently they were wrong, since the tax was passed in 2006, and still exists now — the courts must not have found it unconstitutional, and I assume they tried to get a court to agree with them.
I guess for the people who get their taxes raised, it’s a big tax increase, but otherwise it’s hard to agree that a net tax decrease counts as the biggest tax increase ever.
Note that by that standard, if we switched to a flat tax, added a rule that every citizen had to pay at least $100 of tax (just so they would all be participants), that would be the largest tax increase in the history of mankind (going from $0 to $100, an infinite tax increase).
I’m sorry, but OPT OUT or MANDATE is PerryCARE.
Got that?
It should have been OPT IN.
RINOs just don’t understand, do they?
No income tax, right?
No Corporate taxes?
No Capital gains taxes?
Ranked # 13 in business climate. That could be better.
45 out of 50 in State and local tax burden (1 is DC)
Kind of pathetic smear. I guess that is why businesses are fleeing Texas for California and NY?
Look, what you posted could be construed many different ways and reasonable people on the same team (Republicans) believe we all have similar desires. By you calling Perry a misogynist rino over this is so crazy I just have to ask you to keep em coming. You're doing a better job than me of solidifying my candidate as the one to vote for.
Do you have a reference for the total Alaska budget between 2005 and 2009? I found one reference, but it shows the budget increased every year, and you keep saying she lowered it so I figure I have the wrong reference.
Perry is so passionate about the border and illegal immigration.
Well, Perry understood and he backed off.
I will personally make every effort to raise the level of discourse on the Palin and Perry threads. We must hold ourselves and each other accountable to the standards we expect of FReepers. This is an important election season. The liberals want nothing more than to divide us. If we keep the discussions focused on the candidates, we can avoid division.I haven't been here long enough to exerience a purge and I certainly don't want to experience one now. If things continue down hill between Perry and Palin supporters, it could lead to that. A purge of one group or the other will weaken FR. Let's not put Jim in that position. We need all the conservatives we can muster to defeat Obama and his minions. Let's encourage civility and discourage personal attacks. We shouldn't have to ask Jim and the mods to police these threads.
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