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Texas Government 2306. Unit 9 Taxing and Budgeting. Texas Fiscal Policy: Guiding Principles. Opposition to deficit spending Strong support of low tax rates Strong support for very limited spending for most public services = Fiscal Conservatism. Texas Constitution & Budgeting.
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Texas Government 2306 Unit 9 Taxing and Budgeting
Texas Fiscal Policy: Guiding Principles • Opposition to deficit spending • Strong support of low tax rates • Strong support for very limited spending for most public services = Fiscal Conservatism
Texas Constitution & Budgeting • Requires a balanced budget (no deficit spending) • Biennial legislative sessions requires a two-year budget • Role of Comptroller: revenue forecaster • Sets limits on what state can spend
Major Revenue Producers • Federal Government • Personal income tax • Texas State Government • Sales tax • Local Governments • Ad valorem (property tax)
TAX TERMS/CONCEPTS • ·TAX CAPACITY • oMeasure of a state’s wealth/per capita income • ·TAX EFFORT • oMeasure of how close a state comes to its tax capacity • ·PER CAPITA TAXES • oAverage tax paid per person • ·PROGRESSIVITY/REGRESSIVITY o To what extent are taxes paid according to the ability to pay
Regressive All taxpayers pay the same rate, regardless of income Shifts the tax burden to the middle class & poor Ex.: sales & property tax Progressive Tax rate increases as income increases Shifts the tax burden to the upper class & wealthy Ex.: income tax Regressive vs. Progressive Taxes
TEXAS TAX POLICIES1 • 1.Tax Capacity • ·Measure of state’s wealth/per capita income • Texas Ranking = 97 National Average = 100 • 2.Tax Effort • ·Measure of how close a state comes to its tax capacity • Texas Ranking = 87 National Average = 100
TEXAS TAX POLICIES2 • 3.Per Capita Taxes • ·Average tax paid per person • Texas: $1,280 -- 9.5% of income • U.S. ave.: $1,819 -- 11.3% of income 4.Progressivity/Regressivity • ·Progressive = as income increases, tax rate increases • ·Regressive = tax rate same regardless of income • · Texas = 2nd most regressive tax structure in U.S.
Revenues • In the 2006-07 fiscal year Texas revenues came from the following sources: • 45.7% from state taxes; • 35.5% from federal funding; (Is this good or bad?) • 2.5% from the state lottery; • 16.3% from investments, revenues from public lands, licenses, fees, and other collections
State Rank & Percentage of Income Collected as Taxes-2004-05
State Comparison: Tax Burdens as Percent of Income(Nat. ave.: 6 %; Tx: 4.5%)
1.Sales Tax 2. Motor Fuels Tax 3. Motor Vehicle Sales/ Rental Taxes 4. Corporate Franchise Tax 5. Oil/Gas Production Tax 6. “Sin” Taxes 7. Insurance Co. Taxes 8. All Other Taxes 57% 11% 11% 7% 4.4% 4% 3% 3% TEXAS TAXES--% OF STATE TAX REVENUE
Tax Rates—Two Types • Progressive tax rates - increase as the base increases like the federal income tax: • Those at the bottom have no taxable income and pay nothing • Persons with higher incomes can better afford to pay higher tax rates • Regressive taxation – the rate declines as the base increases
Problems with Texas Tax System • It is regressive - falls more heavily on the poor • It is elastic – relies on sales & excise taxes that rise or fall quickly in response to economic upturns and downturns = not a stable source of revenue for the state
Types of Sales Taxes1 • General sales tax – collected on the retail price of most items (26.3% of ’06-’07 revenues) • Selective sales tax – levied on particular items such as liquor, cigarettes, gasoline, or luxury items (sometimes called hidden or excise taxes)
Taxation2 • Regulatory taxes – taxes that do more than pay for services, these also attempt to control social and economic behavior: • Sin taxes (on tobacco & alcohol); • “use/benefits received” taxes (motor vehicle rental tax, tolls on toll roads); • Excise taxes (gasoline tax)
Taxation3 • Benefits-received taxes – taxing those who benefit from a public service • Ability-to-pay taxes – levied on property, sales, and income: • The more valuable people’s property is, the wealthier they are and able to pay taxes; • Income or expenditure are inadequate measures of true wealth
Borrowing • The Texas constitution limits state borrowing and requires a balanced budget thereby limiting the state debt. • Texas does issue bonds: • General obligation bonds; • Revenue bonds
Taxation: Property Taxes • Many services in Texas are financed by local, instead of state, taxes • Property taxes are the main source of revenue for most local governments. Two types of “ad valorem” (according to value) taxes: • Real property; • Personal property
TEXAS BUDGET1 • ·Dedicated/earmarked funds” - about46% of the state budget· • ·Federal funds - about 36% of budget; must be spent according to fed. govt. regulations • · Court orders– have also forced the Legislature to direct funds to specific programs or uses • §To reduce prison overcrowding (Estelle v. Ruiz) • §To reduce the funding disparity between wealthy and poor school districts—(Edgewood v. Kirby) • §To upgrade MHMR facilities—a federal court order
Dedicated/Earmarked Funds • §Gasoline (motor fuel) tax-3/4 is earmarked for the State Highway Fund and ¼ for the Available School Fund • §Earnings from state lands(oil revenues, etc.)—go directly to the Permanent University Fund (for the UT and A & M university systems) and the Permanent School Fund (for public schools)
Other Budgetary Funds “Locked In” §Federal funds(about36% of the state revenues and state budget) are earmarked by block and categorical grants to basically three areas: • §Health & Human Services • §Highways • §Education §Court ordershave also forced the Legislature to direct funds to specific programs or uses: • §To reduce prison overcrowding (Estelle v. Ruiz—a federal court) • § To reduce the funding disparity between wealthy and poor school districts (Edgewood v. Kirby—a decision by the Texas Supreme Court) • §To upgrade MHMR facilities—a federal court order
TEXAS BUDGET2 • §RESULT: • Only 16% of the state budget is composed of “discretionary funding”(funding the Legislature has control over)—funding unaffected by federal or state statutory requirements, Texas Constitution’s requirements, or court orders
FINANCIAL CRISIS OF 1980s • 1.Collapse of oil prices—1984-5 • from $40/barrel to <$10/barrel • 2.Exploding State Population • 3.National Recession-Mid-1980s • 4. Court Orders • ·Ruiz v. Estelle—reduce prison overcrowding • (federal court order) • ·Edgewood v. Kirby—reduce funding disparity between wealthy & poor school districts (Texas Supreme Court decision) • ·Upgrade State MHMR Facilities • (federal court order)
Financial Crisis in 2002-03 • Texas was $11 billion short to maintain existinglevels of funding • Effects of 9-11 on economy—minor recession • Growing state population—strained many services • State Response: • Minor fee and tax increases • Major cuts in state spending—including higher ed. • Local governments forced to pay for increased cost of public schools =higher local property taxes
Pros 1. A Voluntary tax 2. Texans gamble anyway, might as well keep $ in the state 3. Delays more painful options: i.e. an income tax Cons 1. Immoral way to raise money 2. The poor most likely to play it 3. Feeds on gambling addicts 4. Brings in crime State LotteryProduced only 2.5% of budget in 2005 (down from 5% +)
TAX REFORM OPTIONS • 1.Raise sales tax rate • 2.Broaden sales tax base • ·Tax food and drugs • ·Tax services (legal, financial, etc.) • 3. Raise “Sin Taxes” • 4. Legalize gambling • (casinos, slot machines) • 5.Increase Gasoline/Motor Fuel Tax • 6.Personal Income Tax(Tx: one of 6 states w/o it) • ·1992 constitutional amendment prohibits a state income tax without voter approval
The Budgetary Process • Through the appropriations process the legislature legally authorizes the state to spend money • Agencies make budget requests on past spending and provisions for increases • Dedicated or earmarked funds prevent the legislature from systematically reviewing state spending
TEXAS BUDGETARY PROCESS—THE ROLE OF: • PRESIDING OFFICERS Serve as LBB chair and vice-chair & appoint 4 members • LEGISLATIVE BUDGET BOARD Writes “rough draft” Legislature uses for state budget • LEGISLATURE Drafts & approves 2-year budget • GOVERNOR Use of item veto on budget bill Threat to use general veto & item veto • COMPTROLLER Issues “revenue estimate”