Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP)

Washington

Washington Post: Biden stimulus showers money on Americans, sharply cutting poverty and favoring individuals over businesses

March 8, 2021

These tax changes, along with another round of cash payments, will boost incomes of the bottom 20 percent of Americans by 33 percent, according to Steve Wamhoff, a tax expert at the liberal Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy. That’s more than double what the March 2020 Cares Act did for the poorest Americans. Read […]

Washington State Budget & Policy Center: Why Now Is the Time to Pass a Tax on Extraordinary Profits

March 8, 2021

Members of the Washington State Senate have an historic opportunity to create a more just state tax code while bolstering and sustaining our state’s fiscal and economic recovery long after federal recovery funds fade away. Senate Bill 5096 would create a new 7% excise tax on extraordinary profits from the sale of financial assets (capital […]

Bloomberg Tax: Mega-Rich and Plans to Tax Them Abound in Washington State

March 4, 2021

According to a Dec. 31 report from the bipartisan Tax Structure Work Group, the state’s system creates average tax burdens at 8.2% of total income for households with income between $17,000 and $30,000 a year, but the burden drops as incomes rise and is only 1.8% for households making more than $208,000. The Institute for […]

Washington Post: Biden limits eligibility for stimulus payments under pressure from moderate Senate Democrats

March 4, 2021

Around 12 million fewer adults and 5 million fewer children would get the stimulus payments under the new Biden-Senate compromise, according to preliminary estimates from the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, a left-leaning think tank. About 280 million Americans in total — 200 million adults and 80 million children — would still be eligible […]

Fortune: Biden supports lowering $1,400 stimulus check cutoffs. Here are the proposed income thresholds

March 4, 2021

This lower cutoff proposal, if passed, would result in roughly 12 million fewer adults getting stimulus checks, according to the nonpartisan think tank Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, reported by the Washington Post. In addition, roughly 5 million fewer child dependent checks would be sent. Read more

KKNX: WA Democrats push for capital gains tax in a year when ‘tax’ doesn’t seem like a bad word

March 1, 2021

Democrats say the system isn’t working and often point to a 2018 study by the liberal Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP) that ranked Washington as having the most regressive tax system in the nation. The study found that the lowest 20 percent of earners in Washington spend nearly 18 percent of their income on […]

State Rundown 2/24: State Tax Debates Quickly Thaw Out with Warmer Weather

Warming temperatures in many parts of the country this week seem to be thawing out state fiscal debates as well. Multiple states including California, Colorado, Maryland, and New Jersey saw movement on efforts to improve tax credits for low- and middle-income families. Mississippi House lawmakers suddenly rushed through a dangerous bill to eliminate the state’s income tax and shift those taxes onto lower-income households. Montana senators also approved regressive income tax cuts and South Dakota legislators advanced an anti-tax constitutional amendment, while lawmakers in Hawaii, Rhode Island, and Washington made progress on improving the progressivity of their tax codes. Gas…

Market Watch: Billionaire philanthropy is a ‘PR scam,’ says CEO who raised his workers’ minimum pay to $70,000

February 23, 2021

Billionaires pay the lowest tax rate of any income group nationally, Price added. In Washington state, the richest pay 3% of their income on taxes, while the poor pay 18%, he said. (That’s according to a report by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, a left-leaning think tank.) Read more

State Rundown 2/17: Friction Over Tax Policy Still Generating Heat in Some Statehouses

Cold-hearted regressive tax proposals were pushed this week to cut income taxes on high-income households in states including Idaho, Montana, and West Virginia, while advocates for fair taxes and well-funded services continue to turn up the heat on taxing the richest residents in states like Connecticut and Pennsylvania.

The New York Times: California: Liberal Model or Cautionary Tale?

February 16, 2021

Below is an excerpt of an LTE by ITEP Research Director Carl Davis:   Of course, the very richest people in California pay more tax than they would if they lived in Texas or Washington. But these top earners can afford to live wherever they want. The best available research concludes that top earners rarely […]

Thestranger.com: The Choice Is Clear for Washington Democrats: Pass Progressive Taxes or Perpetuate a Racist Tax Code

February 15, 2021

In their analysis of a new report from the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, the Budget and Policy Center showed that the effective state and local tax rate for Black, Hispanic, Indigenous, and Pacific Islanders is between half a point and one point higher than it is for white people. “While these differences may […]

Washington State Budget & Policy Center: Washington State’s Upside-down Tax Code is Even More Racist than You Think

February 12, 2021

Lawmakers in Olympia are finally listening to communities and rightly focusing on addressing racial disparities that have permeated our state economy and institutions for far too long. They must act immediately to reform many areas of public policy – from policing to housing, health care to employment – that serve to oppress Black, Indigenous, and […]

Washington Post: Drug Companies Seek Billion-dollar Tax Deductions from Opioid Settlement

February 12, 2021

“A settlement has not been reached, and, therefore, we applied significant judgment in estimating the ultimate amount of the opioid litigation settlement that would be deductible,” the company said. Matthew Gardner, a senior fellow at the nonprofit Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, said these disclaimers suggest the companies are making conservative estimates. “That’s one […]

CARES Act Helps Create $4.6 Billion Tax Cut for Health Care Companies Paying Opioid Settlements

Talk about a one-two punch. A new report from the Washington Post reveals that the U.S. public is set to pay for the opioid crisis again. Already, communities across the country have paid a heavy price via the devastating public health toll. Now, it appears taxpayers will be on the hook for billions in corporate tax breaks as four pharmaceutical companies exploit a loophole in the Trump-GOP tax law and a CARES Act tax provision meant for companies facing pandemic-related profit losses.

Testimony to Washington State Legislature House Finance Committee on HB 1496

February 11, 2021 • By Dylan Grundman O'Neill

Testimony to Washington State Legislature House Finance Committee on HB 1496

Read as PDF Following is testimony of ITEP Senior State Tax Policy Analyst Dylan Grundman O’Neill submitted to Washington State Legislature House Finance Committee in support of HB 1496. “Hello and thank you for this opportunity to testify. My name is Dylan Grundman O’Neill, and I’m a Senior State Tax Policy Analyst with the Institute […]

Washington Post: The Pandemic Hit Undocumented Restaurant Workers Hard. These Bartenders Swooped in to Feed Them.

February 10, 2021

Of the 11 million undocumented immigrants in the country, many are cumulatively paying billions of dollars each year to state and local taxes, according to the nonpartisan Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy. Some file taxes under an individual taxpayer identification number in hopes that one day it will help their case in gaining legal status. […]

Washington Post: Here’s the New Democratic Plan for $1,400 Stimulus Payments

February 9, 2021

The best argument in favor of the checks is that they have kept many Americans out of poverty during the crisis. An analysis by the left-leaning Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy found that the bottom 20 percent of Americans — those earning less than $21,300 — would see their income rise nearly 30 percent, helping keep […]

Bloomberg: Cuomo, Murphy Call for More Covid Relief to Hardest-Hit States

February 5, 2021

New Jerseyans stood to pay $3.1 billion more in taxes annually as a result of the 2017 change, according to a study by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, a non-profit, non-partisan research group based in Washington. Read more

Faulty Fact Check on Tax Breaks for the Rich and Corporations

When it comes to tax policy, the details are complicated, but the story is often simple. For example, President Trump’s so-called Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) disproportionately benefits the rich. This is not controversial. Yet some opinion makers with large megaphones get lost in the details and come to conclusions that only create more confusion.

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States Are Finally Going Bold with Progressive Tax Efforts

February 4, 2021 • By Dylan Grundman O'Neill

States Are Finally Going Bold with Progressive Tax Efforts

Advocates, lawmakers, study commissions, and even governors in some states are proposing bold tax policy reforms that look beyond pandemic-induced budget shortfalls and the “K-shaped recovery” to address underlying inequities and underfunding that gave rise to them. These efforts include proposals to: end or reverse regressive tax policies like the preferential treatment of income derived from wealth over income earned through work; restore or strengthen estate and inheritance taxes to slow the concentration of wealth in ever-fewer hands; raise revenue and slow inequality with progressive income taxes; and many other ideas to right upside-down tax codes while raising the revenue…

Washington Post: Here’s the new Democratic plan for $1,400 stimulus checks

February 4, 2021

The best argument in favor of the checks is that they have kept many Americans out of poverty during the crisis. An analysis by the left-leaning Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy found the bottom 20 percent of Americans — those earning less than $21,300 — would see their income rise nearly 30 percent, helping […]

Jacobin: The Washington Post Deserves 324 Billion Pinocchios for Its Attacks on Bernie Sanders

February 4, 2021

Kessler’s entire line of argument deserves about 324 billion Pinocchios — one for each dollar that flowed to the richest fifth of the country in just 2020 alone, according to the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy. The group’s analysis shows that almost three-quarters of the tax cuts flowed to that cohort.. Read more

Washington Post: White House open to narrowing who qualifies for stimulus checks but keeping payments at $1,400 per person

February 2, 2021

Biden’s plan would provide stimulus payments to approximately 95 percent of the country, while the Republican plan, lowering the threshold to those making under $50,000 a year, would provide payments to about 70 percent of the country, according to preliminary estimates of the proposals by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, a left-leaning think […]

The (Tacoma) News Tribune: Washington parents would get big tax breaks under Biden’s COVID relief plan

February 2, 2021

The Institute for Taxation and Economic Policy estimated that the second lowest 20% of Washington income earners, those making $28,800 to $53,200, would save an average $2,470. The middle 20%, who make $53,200 to $84,400, would get an average $2,190 break, and the next group of 20% would see an average $2,110 break. They earn […]

State Rundown 1/28: EITC Efforts a Welcome Contrast to State Tax Tug-of-War

Efforts to deliver and improve targeted tax credits to support low- and middle-income families proved to be unifying in Washington and Oregon, welcome developments in an otherwise divisive week in state tax debates. For example, Mississippi advocates hoping to end the state’s regressive grocery tax are up against a governor and many lawmakers pulling in the opposite direction by trying to eliminate its income tax. After Arizona residents approved an income tax increase to improve education funding, policymakers there are seeking to reverse course by slashing taxes instead. And North Dakota lawmakers are considering converting their graduated income tax into…