Behind the Numbers: What Happens to Personal Income and Government Spending When States Adopt Income Taxes?
Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, October 26, 1999




A recent report by the National Taxpayers Union (NTU) tries to make the case that adoption of an income tax in Tennessee would stunt the growth of the state's economy and cause a sharp rise in state government outlays. NTU's arguments, however, are unpersuasive.

One of the report's claims is its prediction that by 2020 a Tennessee income tax would cause state personal income to be nine percent lower than it would otherwise be. To put this in perspective, if Tennessee's personal income had been nine percent lower in 1998 than it actually was, the state's ranking in per-capita personal income would have dropped six places--past four states that currently levy higher personal income taxes than the four percent rate proposed by Tennessee's governor. Thus, NTU predicts a significant negative impact from an income tax that, as proposed, would be lower than the income taxes of 37 of the 41 states with income taxes. Apparently, NTU believes that Tennessee's economic health, unlike other states, is hugely dependent on the nature of its tax structure.(1)

New Jersey, for example, adopted an income tax in 1976, and since then it has seen its per capita personal income ranking increase from 5th highest in 1976 to 3rd highest in 1998.

The NTU report's other principal argument is that per-capita Tennessee state spending will be $434 higher in 2020 if an income tax is adopted. But this is a meaningless prediction. No one questions that state spending will be higher under any of the tax proposals before Tennessee's legislature--because more of the costs of education would be borne by the state. The real question is whether total state and local spending (including spending by local school boards) will go up. The NTU paper chooses to avoid that question.

Certainly the availability of new tax revenues can make more public services possible. Nevertheless, adopting a personal income tax is unlikely to fundamentally change Tennessee's low-public-spending culture. The state ranks 40th in public spending as a share of personal income. Whether Tennessee's citizens will choose to always be among the lowest spending states in the country remains to be seen. But that choice is independent of the means of raising revenue.

NTU arrives at its unusual predictions by looking at the economic performance and fiscal conduct of nine states that have adopted income taxes since 1967. There are fundamental flaws in this approach, which we now address.

Most states that have adopted income taxes since 1967 have outpaced the rest of the country in terms of real income growth.

NTU's case for the economic badness of state income taxes rests entirely on its finding that six of the nine states that enacted income taxes since 1967 saw their rate of personal income growth decline after adoption of their income taxes. But the comparison is between growth from 1950 to the year of adoption of the income tax and growth after adoption. This comparison is essentially meaningless.

All six states that NTU alleges performed poorly adopted their income taxes within three years of 1970. But the average national growth rate in total personal income from 1950 through 1970 in constant dollars was 4.1 percent, compared to 2.6 percent from 1970 to 1998. Thus, it's not surprising that most states that adopted a personal income tax around 1970 had slower growth thereafter than before, since exactly the same thing happened to states that did not adopt a personal income tax. In fact, every single state saw lower growth in per capita personal income after 1970 compared to growth over the 1950-70 period.

The national economy faced turbulent times in the 1970s, with the OPEC oil embargo, big problems for the American auto and steel industries, stagflation, high interest rates and a sharp drop in productivity growth. It's hard to imagine that NTU has simply forgotten those well-known events. But absent such a gross oversight, one must infer that NTU believes that six state income taxes enacted between 1967 and 1971 somehow caused the nationwide economic problems of the seventies.(2) That, of course, would be a highly implausible theory.

A more meaningful comparison would be to compare growth rates in per capita personal income (in constant dollars) in states that adopted income taxes to both the national average growth rates and to growth rates in states that do not have income taxes. Such a comparison shows the following:

States adopting Income Tax (constant 98$) Year Income Tax Enacted Per Capita Income (PCI) PCI as % of Natl. Average
Year Tax
Enacted
In
1998
Annual
Growth
Natl. in
start year
Natl. in
1998
Natl. Ann.
growth
Year PIT
Enacted
In
1998
Change
New Jersey 1976 $13,002 $ 33,953 +4.5% $ 11,000 $26,482 +4.1% 118.2% 128.2% +10.0%
Nebraska 1967 14,787 24,786 +1.7% 17,054 26,482 +1.4% 86.7% 93.6% +6.9%
Connecticut 1991 31,978 37,700 +2.4% 23,485 26,482 +1.7% 136.2% 142.4% +6.2%
Maine 1969 13,979 23,002 +1.7% 17,054 26,482 +1.5% 82.0% 86.9% +4.9%
Pennsylvania 1971 15,362 26,889 +2.1% 15,454 26,482 +2.0% 99.4% 101.5% +2.1%
Rhode Island 1971 15,503 26,924 +2.1% 15,454 26,482 +2.0% 100.3% 101.7% +1.4%
Michigan 1967 16,886 25,979 +1.4% 17,054 26,482 +1.4% 99.0% 98.1% –0.9%
Illinois 1969 19,418 28,976 +1.4% 17,054 26,482 +1.5% 113.9% 109.4% –4.4%
Ohio 1971 15,734 25,239 +1.8% 15,454 26,482 +2.0% 101.8% 95.3% –6.5%
 
States without Income Tax (constant 98$) Base Year Per Capita Income (PCI) PCI as % of Natl. Average
In
1991
In
1998
Annual
Growth
Natl. in
1991
Natl. in
1998
Natl. Ann.
growth
In
1991
In
1998
Change
Texas 1991 $21,524 $ 25,028 +2.2% $ 23,485 $26,482 +1.7% 91.7% 94.5% +2.9%
Tennessee 1991 20,316 23,615 +2.2% 23,485 26,482 +1.7% 86.5% 89.2% +2.7%
South Dakota 1991 19,164 22,201 +2.1% 23,485 26,482 +1.7% 81.6% 83.8% +2.2%
Washington 1991 24,415 28,066 +2.0% 23,485 26,482 +1.7% 104.0% 106.0% +2.0%
New Hampshire 1991 25,599 29,219 +1.9% 23,485 26,482 +1.7% 109.0% 110.3% +1.3%
Florida 1991 23,278 25,922 +1.5% 23,485 26,482 +1.7% 99.1% 97.9% –1.2%
Nevada 1991 24,649 27,360 +1.5% 23,485 26,482 +1.7% 105.0% 103.3% –1.6%
Wyoming 1991 21,959 23,225 +0.8% 23,485 26,482 +1.7% 93.5% 87.7% –5.8%
Alaska 1991 25,726 25,771 +0.0% 23,485 26,482 +1.7% 109.5% 97.3% –12.2%

There is no evidence that adoption of an income tax leads to increased government spending.

The NTU report claims that in seven of the nine states that enacted income taxes since 1967, state spending has grown at a faster rate since adoption of those income taxes than before adoption. But this is a highly misleading statistic, since it focuses only on state spending rather than total state and local outlays. Many states adopted income taxes for the express purpose of providing local property tax relief. In those states, an increase in state spending would be expected. But total government spending would not go up because combined state and local spending were unchanged.

Annual Changes in Per Capita State & Local Spending
(constant dollars, fiscal years)
  1972-91 1991-96
US Average +1.7% +1.6%
States adopting Income Taxes Since 1967—
  Date of Adoption  
Pennsylvania 1971 +1.5% +2.8%
Illinois 1969 +1.4% +2.4%
Nebraska 1967 +1.9% +2.2%
New Jersey 1976 +2.2% +2.2%
Ohio 1971 +2.3% +2.2%
Rhode Island 1971 +2.6% +1.6%
Michigan 1967 +1.3% +1.4%
Connecticut 1991 +2.5% +0.9%
Maine 1969 +2.3% +0.8%
States without Income Taxes—
Tennessee   +1.8% +3.4%
New Hampshire   +1.6% +3.2%
Texas   +1.8% +2.7%
South Dakota   +1.1% +2.5%
Washington   +1.5% +2.1%
Florida   +2.4% +1.4%
Nevada   +0.8% –0.1%
Wyoming   +2.3% –0.9%
Alaska   +1.7% –2.1%
Comparisons are from 1991 to 1996 (the latest available year) to show recent trends, and from 1972 around when many state income taxes were adopted (and data on state and local spending is available).

Of course, a few states have adopted state personal income taxes with the objective of increasing revenues to pay for expanded government services. There is nothing inherently wrong with the citizens of a state choosing to do that--but it doesn't mean Tennessee will also follow that course.

Again, let us compare the experience of states that adopted an income tax since 1967 with those that still have no income tax:

Of the nine states that adopted an income tax since 1967, five increased per capita state and local spending at a faster rate than the national average from 1991 to 1996. The other four states saw lower growth in per capital state and local spending than the national average.

Likewise, of the nine states without an income tax, five increased per capita state and local spending at a faster rate than the national average from 1991 to 1996, while four saw lower growth.

Thus, in the 1990s, there has been little difference in state and local spending growth rates between states that have adopted an income tax and those that have not.(3)

Conclusion: Distorted Economic Analysis from NTU

The NTU report distorts data to prove a point that is simply wrong. Forty-one states, with more than 80 percent of the nation's population, have broad-based income taxes. At any given time, some of these states have had strong economic growth and others have performed less well. Likewise, some of the nine states that choose not to impose an income tax have performed well, while some have done poorly. Any attempt to measure whether having a particular type of tax structure helps a state economically can depend heavily on the economic measures used and the time periods selected.

NTU tries to take advantage of this fact to manipulate the data towards its desired conclusion. But the truth is that there is no consistent correlation between a state's economic performance and whether it imposes an income tax--or, more precisely, there is no correlation between poor performance and an income tax.

Nationally, nine of the top ten states with the highest per capita personal incomes have broad-based income taxes. Tennessee ranks 34th, below 26 states (and the District of Columbia) with broad-based income taxes.

There are states that rely heavily on income taxes, such as North Carolina and Delaware, that have had good economic growth over a long period of time by a variety of measures. States with low or no personal income taxes such as North Dakota, Alaska and Wyoming have done poorly by a number of economic measures.

Since it adopted its personal income tax, effective in 1992, Connecticut has ranked fourth among the states in real per capita personal income growth--one of the best measures of the financial well-being of the citizens of a state. In fact, Connecticut reclaimed its position of having the highest per-capita income in the country in 1996, after falling to second prior to the adoption of its income tax.

This evidence does not prove that adopting a personal income tax would be beneficial to the Tennessee economy--although at least one study less ideologically biased than NTU's has drawn that conclusion about New Hampshire's proposed income tax.(4) Rather, the evidence shows that among the 41 states with broad-based personal income taxes, most of them are currently doing quite well.

An honest assessment of the data over long periods of time leads to the conclusion that the existence of a personal income tax does not adversely affect a state's economy in any significant way. This really shouldn't be surprising. After all, there are other things that are far more likely to affect business decisions, such as labor costs, proximity to markets, and the quality of the work force. The positive effects of an income tax on tax fairness and getting more bang for the buck for each dollar of tax imposed are easily measured. In contrast, allegations of purported negative effects do not withstand analysis.


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1. The NTU report predicts that Tennessee per capita personal income will grow by 3.5% a year in constant dollars in the absence of an income tax, and 3.1% a year with an income tax. That compares to a 2.1% annual growth rate in Tennessee per capita personal income from 1991 to 1998, when the national per capita personal income grew at an annual rate of 1.7%. Over the next decade, the Congressional Budget Office predicts that national per capita GDP, which closely tracks personal income, will grow at a rate of 1 percent a year.

2. A total of seven states adopted income taxes between 1967 and 1971: Michigan, Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Nebraska, Rhode Island, and Maine. All but Maine failed NTU's unusual economic performance test. (Why Maine passed is not clear, since its growth rates in personal income and per capita personal income before and after adoption of its income tax in 1969 followed the national pattern).

3. Real economic growth, the adoption and expansion of Medicaid since the late sixties, and a variety of other factors have meant that overall state and local per capita spending has risen across the nation over the past three decades.

4. Besides allowing a fairer sharing of the state tax burden, state income taxes impose a lower net burden on state taxpayers as a whole than consumption-based taxes, such as sales and excise taxes, because individuals who itemize deductions can deduct state income taxes on their federal tax returns. To a lesser, but still notable degree income taxes also usually have an advantage over property taxes in this regard, because individual income-tax-payers as a group tend to be in higher federal tax brackets than property-tax-payers.