1 / 24

Alabama’s Tax Reform: What Went Wrong and Why

Alabama’s Tax Reform: What Went Wrong and Why. Dr. Jim Seroka, CGS – Auburn University Alabama Municipal Revenue Officers Association December 5, 2003. Tax Reform in Alabama Down to a Resounding Defeat. Two out of Three Alabamians Vote NO on Amendment 1 on September 9, 2003.

kim
Download Presentation

Alabama’s Tax Reform: What Went Wrong and Why

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2003 CGS - AMROA

  2. Alabama’s Tax Reform:What Went Wrong and Why Dr. Jim Seroka, CGS – Auburn University Alabama Municipal Revenue Officers Association December 5, 2003 2003 CGS - AMROA

  3. Tax Reform in Alabama Down to a Resounding Defeat Two out of Three Alabamians Vote NO on Amendment 1 on September 9, 2003 Governor Riley Repudiated by His Own Party Special Session Makes Dramatic Cuts in the State Budget 2003 CGS - AMROA

  4. Alabamians Who Voted NO Were Strongly Influenced By: 68% - Opposition to the tax increase on cars & trucks 63% - Opposition to 100% market value state property assessment 61% -Governor wanting too much 56% - Low Trust in the Legislature 2003 CGS - AMROA

  5. Alabamians Who Voted YES Were Strongly Influenced By: 66% - Possibility of Teacher Layoff 59% - The Unfairness of the Tax System 59% - The Performance-Based College Scholarship Fund 52% - Potential Closure of Senior Citizen Centers 2003 CGS - AMROA

  6. Alabamians Who Voted YES Strongly Supported: 70% - Increase in the Child Exemption on State Income Tax 65% - Increase in Cigarette Tax 61% - Large Timber Companies Paying More in Property Tax 2003 CGS - AMROA

  7. Who Influenced the Vote for Supporters of Amendment 1? • 48% Alabama Education Association • 36% Governor Riley • 23% AARP • 24% Family 2003 CGS - AMROA

  8. Who Influenced the Vote for Opponents of Amendment 1? • 22% Family • Not ALFA • Not Alabama Republican Party 2003 CGS - AMROA

  9. The Vote Was Not Heavily Influenced by: • TV Ads • Mass Mailings • Church Groups • Political Parties • Social Groups 2003 CGS - AMROA

  10. Who Opposed Amendment 1? • 75% High School/ GED Education • 72% Household Income under $20,000 • 73% Voters identified as Conservative • 71% Voters living in rural areas 2003 CGS - AMROA

  11. Who Supported Amendment 1? • 58% Graduate or Professional Education • 55% African-American voters • 51% Voters with 10 – 20 Years in Alabama • 50% Labor Union Members 2003 CGS - AMROA

  12. For a Tax Initiative to Pass, 2 of 3 Undecided Voters Must Support • 17%are likely to support tax increases • 34%will probably never support tax increases • 49% could be persuaded. 2003 CGS - AMROA

  13. On September 9th, Only 1 of 3 Undecided Voters Supported Amendment 1 2003 CGS - AMROA

  14. Tax Reform Must Be Tied to Education to Succeed • 38% listed improved education as the most critical issue that they supported • 11% of all voters were critical that the tax package was not tied solely to education 2003 CGS - AMROA

  15. Tax Reform Must Address Confidence in Government. • 31% did not see a need for broad tax change • 13% of all voters did not trust government • 10% did not understand the package 2003 CGS - AMROA

  16. What Should We Cut? – The Voters Speak First Choice • 27% Eliminate Waste. • 14% Cut government salaries. • 12%Throw out the bums. • 4% Cut social welfare programs. 2003 CGS - AMROA

  17. Where Do We Find the Money? – The Voters Speak First Choice • 25% Lottery • 11% Alcohol and Tobacco • 9% Property Tax • 6% Sales Tax 2003 CGS - AMROA

  18. There is Strong Opposition To: • 68% Laying Off Teachers • 54% Cutting Aid to Seniors/Children • 50% Increasing State Sales Tax 2003 CGS - AMROA

  19. The Public Strongly Supports: • 73% - Increase in the Tax on Alcohol • 64% - Increase in the Tax on Cigarettes and Tobacco • 63% - Introduce a Lottery 2003 CGS - AMROA

  20. The Public is Sharply Divided About: • Cutting State Agency Budgets. • Ending State Support to the Arts. • Ending Support for Private Schools and Universities 2003 CGS - AMROA

  21. Lesson Learned 1 • Alabama voters will not support tax increases if they are not linked to specific programs that people support. 2003 CGS - AMROA

  22. Lesson Learned 2 • Alabama voters may support limited tax increases if linked to education. 2003 CGS - AMROA

  23. Lesson Learned 3 • Alabama voters will not support tax increases without restoration of faith and confidence in Alabama government. 2003 CGS - AMROA

  24. Thank You Center for Governmental Services 2236 Haley Center Auburn University AL 36849-5225 Tel. (334)844-4781 Fax. (334)844-1919 www.auburn.edu/cgs 2003 CGS - AMROA

More Related