There was great
fanfare in the conservative media outlets weeks ago when Louisiana ’s Presidential wannbe Bobby Jindal
decided the thing to do was raise taxes on working families to pay for a tax
cut for the wealthy. Jindal proposed
completely eliminating the state’s income tax, and making up for the lost
revenue by raising the sales tax rates.
Here is the Wall
Street Journal gushing
over his proposal.
Then
there's Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal, who wants to zero out his state's income tax
(top rate 6%) and the 8% corporate tax and replace them by raising the state's
current 4% sales tax. He would also eliminate some 150 special interest
exemptions from the sales tax, including massage parlors, art work and fishing
boats.
As an economic matter, this swap makes sense. Income taxes
generally do more economic harm because they are a direct penalty on saving,
investment and labor that create new wealth. Sales taxes, by contrast, hit
consumption, which is the result of that wealth creation. Governors Jindal,
McCrory and Heineman cite the growing evidence that states with low or no
income taxes have done better economically in recent decades compared to states
with income-tax rates of 10% or more.
The only problem,
reality set in. Voters having just
digested the lessons of the last national election are not in a mood to do more
for the ultra wealthy. So Mr. Jindal,
facing an embarrassing defeat
has quit the program.
“I realize that some of you think I haven’t been listening.
But you’ll be surprised to learn I have been,” he said in prepared remarks.
“And here is what I’ve heard from you and from the people of Louisiana: ‘Yes,
we do want to get rid of the income tax, but governor, you’re moving too fast
and we aren’t sure that your plan is the best way to do it.’”
Notice of course he doesn’t admit he was wrong, people
like him never do. And he says there are
other ways to get rid of the income tax.
Already, several of you have filed plans that
phase out the income tax. So, let’s work together to pass a bill this session
to get rid of our state income tax.”
and since raising the sales tax doesn’t work, then this must
mean cutting programs that aid low income families, the elderly, students, the
disabled and other groups too lacking in political standing to fight back. Exactly how that is an improvement over
raising the taxes for those folks is not explained.
Gee Grover, how is all this working out for you?
Paul Krugman, always
on top of everything, documents
the Jindal fiasco in even more detail.
Mr. Krugman tries to find the true heir to Margaret Thatcher in the U. S.
and comes up with Mr. Jindal.
And what that means
is that her truest heir in America is … Bobby Jindal, the not-so-whizzy
whiz-kid governor of Louisiana, who proposed scrapping his state’s income tax and replacing it with sales taxes.
Grover Norquist loved it:
Grover Norquist, the
intellectual leader of the anti-tax crowd in Washington ,
had praised Jindal’s plan as “the boldest, most pro-growth state tax reform in U.S. history.”
He noted that it was particularly significant, because with Obama positioned to
veto anything resembling the House GOP’s budget for the next several years,
Louisiana might be Republicans’ best chance to show off their tax ideas on the
state level.
“The
national media and Acela-corridor crowd continue to focus on the bickering Washington , but they can learn what real tax reform looks
like by looking to Louisiana ,”
Norquist said.
But strange to say, it’s not just Acela
riders who hate this idea; so do the citizens of Louisiana , who disapprove by 63 to 27
percent. Jindal’s own approval has collapsed, so he’s having his own poll tax
moment.
No comments:
Post a Comment