Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP)

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ITEP's Citations Research Priorities

Amendment 66 will restore Colorado’s ability to raise enough revenue to meet our schools’ growing needs and make the income tax more like those of our neighboring states, all without overburdening Coloradans. From the adoption of the income tax in 1937 through 1986, Colorado used a “tiered” income tax, where tax rates rose along with […]

Real Change: Study finds Washington’s tax system is the nation’s most regressive

October 3, 2013

(Original Post) October 2, 2013 Vol: 20 No: 40 by: Aaron Burkhalter , Staff Reporter     Washington’s poorest people pay the highest taxes in the entire country. According to a study by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, Washington state’s least affluent residents pay 16.9 percent of their income in state and local […]

Green Car Reports: Gas Tax Unchanged For 20 Years Today; Road Costs, However…

October 1, 2013

(Original Post) BY  Stephen Edelstein Oct 1, 2013 Taxes on gasoline and diesel make up 85 percent of the revenue flowing into the United States’ transportation spending account, but that may change. Soon, the gas tax may not provide enough revenue to fund the nation’s transportation spending, a new report from the Institute on Taxation […]

National Journal: Happy 20th, Gas Tax!

October 1, 2013

(Original Post) By Fawn Johnson September 30, 2013 On Oct. 1, the 18.4 cent-per-gallon federal gas tax is 20 years old. And it is likely to remain at that level until it is old enough to drink. The current gas tax rate is not nearly enough to cover the cost of maintaining the roads and […]

Governing: Is Earmarking the Best Way to Fund Projects?

September 30, 2013

(Original Post) It’s not black and white, but understanding the pros and cons increases your chances of coming to the right answer for a particular project. BY: KATHERINE BARRETT & RICHARD GREENE | OCTOBER 2013 There are many issues in government management where things aren’t black and white, where gray is the color of the […]

The Atlantic: We Could Fix America’s Highways If Every Driver Kicked In an Extra $4.66 Per Month

September 26, 2013

(Original Post) ERIC JAFFESEP 25, 2013 Don’t let the instinctive uproar over high gas costs fool you: Americans should be paying more to drive. But “more” is a vague and relative word. Exactly how much more would it take to cover the costs of road maintenance and construction in the United States? The Institute on […]

Oregon Center for Public Policy: A Grandly Flawed Bargain

September 26, 2013 • By ITEP Staff

The revenue package that Governor Kitzhaber has presented to the Oregon legislature to consider in a special session starting September 30 suffers from three major flaws: revenue shrinks after the current budget period, it’s mainly a tax cut for some of Oregon’s wealthiest 1 percent, and it won’t create any jobs, despite what its proponents […]

The FY 2014 budget included new investments in our transportation system, in education, and in other areas. Part of the funding for these came from a “tech tax,” which is likely to be repealed without being replaced by an ongoing revenue source. This report explores some of the ways we might in the future fund […]

PR Newswire: Congress, Not Fuel-Efficient Cars, to Blame for Transportation Funding Shortfall

September 24, 2013

(Original Post) Sept. 24, 2013, 8:15 a.m. EDT WASHINGTON, Sept. 24, 2013 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ — New ITEP Report Shows Obsolete Gas Tax Has Cost $215 Billion, Undermined Infrastructure and Added to Deficit On October 1, the federal gas tax will mark exactly twenty years stuck at the rate of 18.4 cents per gallon. Against […]

The Fiscal Times: You Won’t Believe Which State Taxes Its Poor the Most

September 24, 2013

(Original Post) BETH BRAVERMAN The Fiscal Times  September 23, 2013 Washington State may have one of the lowest overall tax burdens in the country, but its poorest citizens pay more than residents of any other state. The poorest 20 percent of Washington residents pay 16.9 percent of their income in taxes, while the top 1 […]

Center for American Progess: The Real Cost of Cuccinelli

September 23, 2013 • By ITEP Staff

Besides working on these major research projects, I developed CTJ/ITEP’s strong online media presence. One of the most important roles I play is as the primary web manager for both CTJ and ITEP. Similarly, over the past two years I successfully initiated and then maintained CTJ and ITEP’s social media presence. Center for American Progress […]

  After analyzing options for tax changes put forth by the Tax Modernization Committee, we believe some present a real opportunity to strengthen Nebraska and its economy. Ideas that the committee will discuss at upcoming public hearings that start Monday in Scottsbluff would bolster investments in education, health care and public safety as well as […]

Washington Post: The state that taxes the poor the most is… a blue one

September 23, 2013

(Original Post) By Niraj Chokshi, Published: September 21 at 10:00 am The state that easily handed President Obama a victory last November while passing voter-approved referendums legalizing same-sex marriage and marijuana consumption also happens to have the nation’s highest tax burden on the poor. Poor families in Washington state pay 16.9 percent of their total […]

Media Matters: Conservative Media’s Misplaced Hysteria Over Immigrants And Welfare

September 23, 2013

(Original Post) Blog ››› September 18, 2013 6:04 PM EDT ››› SOLANGE UWIMANA Right-wing media have seized on a report noting that American children in Los Angeles County with undocumented parents are receiving millions in benefits to revive the spurious smear that undocumented immigrants come to this country only to receive welfare. However, these outlets […]

The Shorthorn: I want to disrupt what you think

September 18, 2013

(Original Post) Posted: Wednesday, September 18, 2013 12:45 am | Updated: 1:50 am, Wed Sep 18, 2013. Lindsey Juarez The Shorthorn staff  teenage boy rode his bicycle to the DMV 16 years ago to get what many teenage boys dream of having: a driver’s license. The boy with jet black hair and olive eyes stood […]

News & Observer: America’s growing income divide

September 16, 2013

  By Ned Barnett The downtown lot where Raleigh’s Occupy movement once camped is now empty. The fast-food workers who picketted over being paid the meager minimum wage of $7.25 an hour have gone back to making burgers and fries. The Moral Monday protesters have vanished from outside the state Legislative Building, their weekly gatherings […]

The tax plan recently signed into law by Governor Pat McCrory fails to make the fundamental changes North Carolina needs to create a modern, adequate and fair revenue system that can boost the state’s economy and strengthen schools, health care and other services families need to prosper and the economy needs to grow. The plan […]

Policy Matters Ohio: Cutting taxes isn’t helping Ohio

September 11, 2013 • By ITEP Staff

For years, North Dakota has had the lowest unemployment rate of any state in the nation. Nevada, by contrast, has had the highest. North Dakota has a personal income tax, while Nevada has no personal income tax. There are, of course, other states that show a different pattern. We cite this to illustrate that taxes, […]

Twin Cities Daily Planet: New reports underscore growing wage and income disparities

September 11, 2013

(Original Post) By Jeff Van Wychen, Minnesota 2020 September 09, 2013 Two recent reports—the first from the Minnesota Budget Project and the second from Growth & Justice—underscore different aspects of the same distressing economic trend: lower- and middle-income households’ deteriorating earning and purchasing power. “In the Shadow of the Great Recession: The State of Working […]

Columbia Journalism Review: Invasion of the Job Snatcher

September 9, 2013

(Original Post) As the Missouri media takes up arms against Rick Perry, some facts and context get lost in the fray By Deron Lee FAIRWAY, KS — Texas and Missouri no longer square off as Big 12 opponents, but governors Rick Perry and Jay Nixon—with some help from Missouri’s media—have ignited a new interstate rivalry. […]

Memphis Commercial Appeal: Op-Ed: What FedEx Can Teach Us About Tax Reform

September 9, 2013

What FedEx Can Teach Us About Tax Reform September 8, 2013 Original Post by Matt Gardner, Executive Director, Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy Democratic Senator Max Baucus and Republican Congressman Dave Camp, the chairmen of the tax committees in the Senate and House of Representatives, are visiting FedEx headquarters in Memphis this week to […]

Card Hub: Should Uncle Sam Take a Toke to Fill His Coffers?

August 28, 2013

(Original Post)   by John Kiernan on August 27, 2013 When in doubt, look to the founding fathers.  That’s what we do in this country, isn’t it?  We reference the Constitution in order to rationalize legal disputes, questions of fundamental rights, the role of the military, etc.  We hold our leaders up to the standards […]

SD HB1154 proposes lowering state sales tax on certain food items and increasing sales tax on other goods and services in a revenue-neutral exchange. Read the Full Report 

The Joplin Globe: Sloppy attempt would lead Missourians into dark hole

August 26, 2013

(Original Post) August 26, 2013 By Elliott Denniston Special to The Globe WEBB CITY, Mo. — Republican legislators and a handful of self-interested groups are campaigning to override Gov. Jay Nixon’s veto of House Bill 253, a slipshod attempt to revise our income tax code. The bill drastically shifts the burden from high earners to […]

Huron County View: Immigration reform would boost revenue by $35 million

August 23, 2013

(Original Post) WASHINGTON — A new analysis estimates that unauthorized immigrants pay Michigan $126 million in state, local taxes. The study also estimates that Michigan would gain $35 million in increased revenue should undocumented immigrants in the U.S. be allowed to work legally. The analysis, from the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, assumes a […]