Title: Tax and Expenditure Limitations: Issues for Florida
1Tax and Expenditure Limitations Issues for
Florida
- Randall G. Holcombe
- DeVoe Moore Professor of Economics, Florida State
University - Senior Fellow, The James Madison Institute
2One Possible Design Principle Limit Expenditure
Growth to No More than the Sum of Inflation and
Population Growth
- Allow the cap to be overridden by a citizen
referendum. - This implements the principle of No Taxation
Without Representation. - Why should per person government expenditures
grow faster than inflation?
3The State Budget and a Population Growth Plus
Inflation Cap
- Fiscal Year Appropriations Pct. Inc.
Cap - 2002-03 50.3 Billion 3.8 50.8 Billion
- 2003-04 53.5 Billion 6.3 53.0 Billion
- 2004-05 57.3 Billion 7.1 56.0 Billion
- 2005-06 63.1 Billion 10.1 59.3 Billion
- 2006-07 73.9 Billion 17.2 62.1 Billion
- 2007-08 71.5 Billion -3.2 64.9 Billion
- The state budget has increased by 42 in the past
five years. It would have increased 28 with an
inflation population growth cap.
4Property Tax Growth 1996-2006Actual, and With
Cap
- Total Property Tax Collections
- Year Actual Property Taxes Inf. Pop. Gr.
Cap - 1996 12.3 billion
- 2001 16.7 billion 15.6 Billion
- 2006 30.4 billion 20.8 Billion
- Property tax revenue has grown much faster than
population growth plus inflation in the last
half-decade.
5Property Tax Growth 1996-2006
- Percentage Growth in Inflation-Adjusted Property
Taxes Per Person - Time Period Property Tax Growth Inf.
Pop. Gr. - 1996-2001 35.8 26.5
- 2001-2006 82.0 27.6
- Property tax revenue growth has skyrocketed over
the past half-decade. - This suggests that an expenditure cap will not
completely address the property tax issues that
have come up in the past few years.
6Alternative Caps
- Inflation plus population growth. Expenditures
per person cannot grow faster than the rise of
prices in general. - Personal income. Expenditures cannot take an
increasingly-larger share of income. - Existing expenditures. Expenditures cannot go up
at all, without voter approval. - Zero. All taxes, and therefore expenditures
(with a balanced budget) require periodic
reapproval by the voters.
7Personal Income Growth vs. Inflation and
Population Growth
- Year Inc. Growth Pop Inflation
- 1995-96 6.2 4.8
- 1996-97 6.2 5.0
- 1997-98 7.1 3.8
- 1998-99 6.9 3.9
- 1999-00 6.4 5.5
- 2000-01 6.7 5.8
- 2001-02 3.6 3.9
- 2002-03 3.4 4.6
- 2003-04 7.2 4.8
- 2004-05 8.7 5.5
- 2005-06 7.5 6.2
- 2006-07 7.4 4.7
- Cumulative 98.8 77.0
8The State Budget and a Personal Income Growth Cap
- Fiscal Year Appropriations Pct. Inc.
Cap - 2002-03 50.3 Billion 3.8 50.2 Billion
- 2003-04 53.5 Billion 6.3 53.8 Billion
- 2004-05 57.3 Billion 7.1 58.5 Billion
- 2005-06 63.1 Billion 10.1 62.9 Billion
- 2006-07 73.9 Billion 17.2 67.6 Billion
- 2007-08 71.5 Billion -3.2 70.5 Billion
- The state budget has increased by 42 in the past
five years. It would have increased 40 with a
personal income growth cap.
9Property Tax Growth 1996-2006Actual, and With
Personal Income Cap
- Total Property Tax Collections
- Year Actual Property Taxes Pers. Inc. Gr.
Cap - 1996 12.3 billion
- 2001 16.7 billion 15.7 Billion
- 2006 30.4 billion 21.1 Billion
- Property tax revenue has grown much faster than
personal income in the last half-decade.
10A Cap on Total Government Spending May Not Offer
Sufficient Protection to Property Taxpayers
- Property owners are vulnerable if their assessed
values rise. - All property owners should be protected against
major property tax increases. - Save Our Homes provides this protection for
homestead property only. - Property owners could be protected from being
taxed out of their property by placing the cap on
individual assessed values of all property (not
just homestead) for tax purposes. - A TABOR will not take the place of a limitation
on increases in assessed values for tax purposes.
11What Should Be the Override Mechanism if a Cap is
Imposed?
- Currently, local governments can override the cap
imposed by the 2007 legislature by a
supermajority vote of the governing body. - Obtaining a supermajority vote of the governing
body may be little harder than obtaining the
simple majority vote that would have been
required prior to the 2007 legislation. - A requirement of a citizen referendum would keep
expenditures from rising unless voters agreed,
implementing the principle of No Taxation
Without Representation.
12In the News This Week Eight of Palm Beach
Countys 37 Municipalities Said They Would Exceed
Their Cap
- Highland Beach, North Palm Beach, Riviera Beach,
South Palm Beach, Lake Clarke Shores Manalapan,
Ocean Ridge, and Lake Park all said they would
approve property tax rates above their legislated
caps. - All it takes is a supermajority vote of the city
commissions to override the cap. - We already see that allowing elected officials to
override a cap creates an ineffective cap. - The requirement of voter approval in a referendum
would more effectively constrain expenditures.
13In the News Florida Supreme Court Rules that an
Escambia County Special Tax District Needs Voter
Approval to Issue Bonds to be Paid Off With
Property Taxes
- The ruling was unanimous.
- Does this ruling apply to other jurisdictions,
such as school districts? Some jurisdictions
have asked the Court for a clarification of its
ruling. - Should this ruling apply to other jurisdictions?
- Should taxes be levied on Floridians by their
governments, even if citizens disapprove?
14Voter Approval of Taxes in Florida
- 60 of Floridas 67 counties have local option
sales taxes. - In 38 of those counties the local option taxes
have an expiration date. - Prior to the adoption of the 1968 Constitution,
voters in every school district approved (in a
referendum) the school districts millage rate
every two years. - Floridas voters will vote in favor of taxes when
they believe the revenues will be spent to
further the public interest.
15Rather than Looking at Caps, Another Way to
Control Taxes Is To Require Voter Approval of
Taxes
- Voter approval embodies the principle of no
taxation without representation. - Existing taxes can be subject to approval (in
addition to any new taxes). - Floridas history with millage referenda and
local option sales taxes shows that Florida
voters will approve taxes when they believe the
money is well-spent. - Consider, for example, holding a referendum every
four years on the sales tax rate, using Floridas
old system for school millage referenda.
16Some Thoughts on Voter Approval of Taxes
- When considering voter approval for overriding a
cap, lets turn that thinking around. Rather
than thinking that there is a cap, and with voter
approval it can be exceeded, think about it as a
requirement for voter approval of taxes, with the
cap representing what can be taxed even if voters
dont agree. - Look at the lessons from Floridas school millage
referenda that ended with the new Constitution in
1968, and the lessons from current local option
sales taxes. - A cap can be a level of taxation below the
current level, as in both of these cases - Voters will approve taxes when they believe the
money will be well-spent. - Final thought on voter approval Do we really
want to override the will of the voters, even if
we think we know better?
17Conclusions
- Florida has had substantial growth in government
expenditures, both at the state and local levels. - The TBRC should look seriously at designing an
effective cap on state and local government
revenues and expenditures. A number of citizen
groups are working on citizen initiative
amendments, and the TBRC has the opportunity to
preempt those efforts by producing a
well-designed limitation. (Many people do not
like the effects of Save Our Homes. If you are
one of them, you can act now to preempt a similar
amendment.) - The TBRC should give serious consideration to the
role of voter approval in any tax or expenditure
limitation. It embodies the principle of no
taxation without representation, and makes
governments more responsive to the desires of
their citizens. - Florida history shows that Floridians will vote
to tax themselves, when their governments
convince them that the money will be well-spent.