Title: Raising Public Funds to Provide Public Services
1Raising Public Funds to Provide Public Services
- Overview of Taxation Tax Policy
2Education Expenditures with Respect to Income
3Where the Money Comes From
4Where the Money Comes From
Income Taxes
Income and Sales Taxes
Property Taxes
5Local, State and Federal Involvement over Time
6Once again.
Federal
1. Increased equity 2. Increased bureaucracy 3.
More rational control 4. Distant from point of
need Note some research indicates that state
governments spend cumulatively less than local
governments when the shift is made.
1. Increased local interest 2. Increased
disparity Note Some suggest that local control
over spending decisions helps retain voter
interest in the quality of services.
State
Local
7Definitions
- Tax Base
- Wealth (Property etc.)
- Income (Personal, Corporate)
- Consumption (Sales, Luxury, Sin)
- Tax Yield Tax Rate X Tax Base
- Tax Impact (formal payer)
- Tax Incidence (tax passed on)
- Elasticity
8Typical Revenue Sources
- Income tax
- State and Federal (a few local)
- Primary source of govt revenues
- typically flat (though designed progressive)
- Sales tax
- State (some county and local)
- Major source of state revenues
- Property tax
- Generally local
- Historically primary source of revenues for
municipal services including
9Fairness of Taxation?Tax Equity
- Feeling the pain?
- Rate (or levy) levy (percent) applied to base
- Burden cumulative effects of tax levies
- Effort cumulative tax levies relative to
capacity to pay - Tax Design
- Progressive increased effort with increased
capacity - Regressive decreased effort with increased
capacity - Flat Neither progressive nor regressive.
10Progressiveness/ Regressiveness
Regressive
Effective Rate
Progressive
Capacity to Pay
11Tax Efficiency Effectiveness
- Economic Effects
- Border wars competitiveness
- Administrative Costs
- Compliance Rates
- Predictability and Stability of Revenues
- Diversifying your portfolio
- Trends in Kansas?
- Political Acceptability
- Exportability
- Question - Why retain the property tax in VT when
it is effectively applied as an income tax (by
way of the income cap)?
12Taxing Income
- Primary source of Federal (43 individual, 11
corporate) and major source of State Revenues
(most states) - Defining income?
- Gross, Adjusted Gross?
- Brackets and Progressivity
- Local income taxes?
- New York (NYC Yonkers)
- Effectiveness
- Increasing compliance costs
- May fluctuate more (more immediately) than
property tax revenues
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14Income Tax
15Consumption Taxes
- Sales Tax
- Major source of state revenues (VT lowest at
21.7) - Selective Sales Taxes
- Reduction of burden to low income (food, clothes
exemptions) - Increase burden to high income (luxury tax)
- Effectiveness
- Compliance high and relatively inexpensive
- Still generally regressive
16Consumption/Sales Taxes
17Taxing Wealth
- Real Property
- Residential
- Corporate Industrial
- Agricultural
- Tangible Property
- Personal, motor vehicle
- Intangible Property
- Investments
18Property Valuation
- Market Value value for which the property could
be sold - Net income Applies to commercial properties
(small businesses) - Replacement cost Applies to large business
properties, utilities, railroads (in combination
with net income methods) - Best Use
- Alternatives for farmland
- Deferred taxation
- Preferential use
19Assessment Rates
- Taxable Wealth is not equivalent to market
value - KS assesses residential property at 11.5 of
value (less the first 20 in value)
20Exemptions Circuit Breakers
- Homestead exemptions
- Economic development exemptions
21KS MO School Tax Issues
- Missouri
- Residential 19 FMV
- Commercial 32
- Farm 12
- Tax Rates in Dollars per 100 Assessed Value
- No limits (with 2/3 majority)
- May levy up to 2.75/100 without vote
- Kansas
- Residential 11.5
- Exemption on first 20k value
- Commercial 30
- Motor Vehicles 30 (98-99)
- Agricultural 30 (use value)
- Commercial machinery 20
- Tax Rates in Mills (1/1000)
- Statewide 20 mill levy (but local communities
retain exemption control) - Local tax revenue capped
22DISTRICT A
100k ea x 10 1,000,000
1 child per house 10 Children 1 Tax Rate x
1,000,000 10,000 Total Revenue 10,000 Total
Revenue/10 Children 1,000 per Pupil
23DISTRICT B
100k ea x 10 1,000,000 1,000,000 Taxable
Value of Oil Reserves
1 child per house 10 Children 1 Tax Rate x
2,000,000 10,000 Total Revenue 20,000 Total
Revenue/10 Children 2,000 per Pupil
24Property Tax Evaluation
25Benefit perspective on Property Taxes
- Empirical analyses support the argument that the
quality of local public schools influences
property values - Unfortunately, our shortsighted nature tends to
make us frown on this benefit, because it
generally means a higher tax bill for the same
tax rate (we worry more about our annual taxes on
the home than the profit we might make from the
eventual sale of the home)
26More on distortions
- Effect of tax on value of structure
- Disincentive to improve value of property
- Alternative Land value tax
27Evaluating Lotteries
28Tax Limits
- 1. Overall property tax rate limits that set
a ceiling that cannot be exceeded without a
popular vote These limits apply to the aggregate
rate of tax on all local governments (not just
school property taxes) - 2. Specific property tax rate limits that
set a ceiling that cannot be exceeded without a
popular vote These limits apply to specific
types of local jurisdictions - 3. Property tax levy limits that constrain
the total revenue that can be raised from the
property tax, independent of the rate - 4. Assessment increase limits that control
the ability of local governments to raise revenue
by reassessment of property or through natural or
administrative escalation of property values - 5. Full disclosure and Truth in Taxation
provisions that require public discussion and
specific legislative vote before enactment of tax
rate or levy increases.
29Alternatives
- Statewide non-residential property tax
- tightens capitalization benefit by allowing
local residents the option to tax only their
primary residential properties toward enhancing
local public services - Creates equity advantages by distributing the
taxable value of commercial and industrial
properties (note that most commercial properties
retain a certain value not solely due to local
consumers. The same is even more true of
utilities and industrial real estate) - May reduce/soften economic shocks to local
communities
30Property Taxes, Yield Tax Effort
Taxable MHU .115 x (MHU 20,000) Tax Burden
Median Tax Bill / Median Family Income
31Other Revenues
- 1. User fees Busing, food service, textbook
and lab fees, activities fees - 2. Non-student user fees Leasing of space
(athletic complexes, classrooms, auditorium) or
providing services to local community members and
groups - 3. Business partnerships
- 4. Volunteers Though not revenue per se,
volunteer time is a resource that might be
assigned a dollar value - 5. Investment returns Most investment of
public tax revenues is typically short term, and
restricted to relatively low yield, insured
accounts. Note, however, that many of the
alternative revenues on this list are not so
constrained. - 6. Donations Donations of money or
materials, supplies and equipment. - 7. Educational foundations Independently
operated charitable not-for-profit organizations
whose primary mission is to raise funds for local
public school districts.
32Foundation Revenues in Vermont
33Foundation Revenues and Equity Concerns
Brent, 2002
34Foundations in Kansas
Annual Revenue Summary
35Kansas Tax Issues
- Reduction of required school property taxes
- Followed by expansion of local discretionary
local property taxes - Use of county and municipal sales taxes to
circumvent limitations - Growing disparity since 1992
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40Missouri Tax Issues
- State imposed cap on property taxes
- override by state Supreme Court (Implications -
Can a court levy indirectly a tax?) - Amendment (Hancock) re surplus
- Increased reliance on gaming revenues (Casino
Lottery) - Note research suggests lotteries are (1)
inefficient (high administrative costs) (2)
regressive