State Tax Reform Proposal

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Hobbes

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A new approach to taxation was the subject of a legislative study in the House Appropriations and Budget Subcommittee on Revenue and Taxation. Rep. Mark McCullough proposes taxing service transactions and eliminating corporate income tax while reducing personal income taxes.

McCullough claims a tax on service transactions would be a more reliable revenue stream for the state. His proposal would tax transactions on everything from oil changes to health care.

“This is not a tax increase proposal; this is a dollar for dollar swap that I am suggesting,” said McCullough. “We live in a service-based economy. The benefit is that services would be a much more reliable revenue stream for the state than corporate taxes or income taxes, which have proven to be unstable.”

McCullough points to testimony provided by Oklahoma Tax Commission Director Tony Mastin during the committee meeting on Wednesday. Mastin said two-thirds of Oklahoma corporations don’t even pay the tax because of exemptions and profit requirements in law, and that revenue from the tax has fluctuated from as much as $550 million some years to $150 million in other years.
McCullough said that proves corporate taxes are not reliable.

“The corporate tax is a joke and any effort to repeal corporate tax credits is extremely difficult,” said McCullough. “We can’t win because the corporations send armies of lobbyists to the Capitol if you even suggest repealing a tax credit. So let’s beat them at their own game and just repeal the corporate tax altogether.”
McCullough said a service tax would be more fair and predictable.

“The idea is that everybody pays – no carve outs, no exemptions,” said McCullough. “Tax all services at a very low rate, across the board. Conservative economists say the key to increasing revenue and maximizing economic activity is a flatter rate, a broader base and fewer exemptions. This plan answers all of those requirements.”

McCullough’s proposal doesn’t eliminate individual income taxes, even though he also laments those same taxes are too reliant on the oil and gas industry. He would like to have individual income taxes set at a flat rate of three percent with no exemptions. He added that going to zero would be difficult.

“Look, we’re not Texas, and personal income tax is an important revenue stream for us in Oklahoma,” he said. “A flat three percent rate with no exemptions would still give us that revenue stream while also making us extremely competitive with other states.

This proposal to change the state tax system were the result of the work of the House Tax Policy Working Group. Members of the group are McCullough, Rep. Charles McCall, Rep. Tom Newell, Rep. David Derby, and Rep. Earl Sears.


http://mccarvillereport.com/archives/34147
 

BReeves

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Mixed emotions, being in the service business for most of my life makes me cringe at the thought of a tax on labor. Might be easier to take if they also reduced the high sales taxes on goods.
 

Rod Snell

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economists say the key to increasing revenue and maximizing economic activity is a flatter rate, a broader base and fewer exemptions.

True statement, noble cause, never has worked because "fewer exemptions" turns into "everybody's but MINE!!" In OK, reducing top rate and eliminating exemptions on personal income tax amounts to a tax increase on those least able to pay and a tax break for those making the most.....oh, yeah, that's going to attract attention!

The corporate tax is a joke and any effort to repeal corporate tax credits is extremely difficult,” said McCullough.

Personally, I would rather the legislature grow a pair and solve the corporate tax directly, which they have the power to do, difficult or not. It their collective fault if it is a joke now.
 
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yukonjack

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Marijuana legalization should be on the table as a new revenue source to close the budget gap. It would generate a ton of revenue and save a ton of money in enforcement costs.

http://time.com/4037604/colorado-marijuana-tax-revenue/

I'm guessing your joking, eh? Sin taxes seldom bring in as much as they are hyped. There are still counties in Oklahoma where you can't get liquor by the drink.

And remember how the lottery was gonna solve all of Oklahoma's educational funding problems. And before that betting on horse races was gonna bring in zillions.

No, Oklahoma government has a spending and corruption problem.
 

Dale00

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Lots of opportunity for graft in this. Some monied interests will will see their ox gored by this. Others will see themselves benefitted by this proposal. Both sides will pour on the campaign contributions, cushy jobs for relatives etc. to decide which way the vote will go.
 

dennishoddy

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I'm guessing your joking, eh? Sin taxes seldom bring in as much as they are hyped. There are still counties in Oklahoma where you can't get liquor by the drink.

And remember how the lottery was gonna solve all of Oklahoma's educational funding problems. And before that betting on horse races was gonna bring in zillions.

No, Oklahoma government has a spending and corruption problem.

The lotto would have solved Okla's educational funding problems if they had left the previous budget the same and used the lotto as bonus money, but the legislature, decided to let the lotto run education, and squander education money elsewhere.

The horse racing industry was a failure in every other state, who thought Oklahoma was going to make it work?
 

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