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California budget cutters look at tax breaks
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By Judy Lin
Sacramento Bee
March 23, 2008
Each year Californians benefit from an estimated $50 billion
in tax breaks, deductions for everything from conducting
business research to raising children.
But as California faces at least an $8 billion state budget
shortfall this summer, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and
Democratic lawmakers have begun focusing on those deductions,
credits and exemptions – what budget wonks call "tax
expenditures" – to help balance the books.
State leaders are battling over how to solve the budget, with
Democrats pushing to increase revenue and GOP lawmakers
advocating only cuts. The governor and lawmakers have yet to
embrace a specific tax break, but both sides are analyzing the
possibilities.
The conversation isn't likely to stop there. Assembly
Democrats proposed – and Schwarzenegger's fellow Republicans
in the lower house rejected – taxes on oil production and
profits. Schwarzenegger, meanwhile, last week raised the
possibility of taxing services.
"There's a lot of changes that are happening in
California and all over the United States,"
Schwarzenegger said Wednesday while promoting budget changes.
"I mean, we are missing a lot out there. There's whole
new economies that are developing, service-oriented
economies."
But as yet there is no agreement on some of the less sweeping
revisions to tax breaks, such as those suggested by the
Legislature's nonpartisan fiscal adviser, Elizabeth Hill.
Hill said the state could achieve better taxing and spending
balance by tweaking 12 tax policies that could generate $2.7
billion in annual revenue.
Among her proposals:
• Reduce the state income tax exemption for each dependent
from $294 to $94 because the 10-year-old law, Hill said,
mostly benefits taxpayers making $50,000 or more.
• Limit the research and development credit that a company
may claim in one year to two-thirds of its tax liability so
that more businesses contribute to the state treasury.
• Extend from 90 days to one year the time a yacht,
recreational vehicle or plane must be kept out of state in
order for the purchaser to avoid paying sales tax.
The politics of tax expenditures are evolving. Democrats want
taxes to be part of the budget solution but don't support all
of Hill's ideas. Legislative Republicans say easing or
repealing tax breaks amounts to raising taxes, which they
oppose. Schwarzenegger, who says he opposes tax increases, has
a different definition.
"I think we should not get caught up on what is something
called, and what is the definition of something because that
doesn't bring anyone any health care," he said in early
March. "It doesn't bring anyone any education. It doesn't
hire teachers. … What we need to do is fix problems and just
put everything on the table and not debate what the definition
of something is."
Hill's most lucrative proposal – reducing the dependent
income tax exemption – would bring the state $1.3 billion in
the fiscal year that starts July 1.
Lawmakers and then-Gov. Pete Wilson expanded the child
dependent exemption in 1997 and 1998 when the state's budget
picture was brighter and tax relief was a necessary political
piece to approve the budget. Hill's proposal would lower the
amount deducted for each child to the same level – $94 this
year – allowed for a personal exemption.
"It's true it gives a lot of tax relief, but we're not
sure what the exact purpose of the dependent credit is being
set at that ($294) level," said David Vasché, director
of revenue and taxation at the analyst's office. "We
don't know, especially since a substantial amount of the
dependent credit goes to individuals with high incomes."
Teresa Casazza, president of California Taxpayers'
Association, a corporation-backed group that opposes taxes,
said lowering the credit would disproportionately affect
lower-income families because taxes have a bigger impact on
their bottom line.
Democratic leaders like Assembly Speaker Fabian Núñez, D-Los
Angeles, support more tax revenue but have not leaped to
embrace the dependent exemption change. Núñez has been
advocating business tax increases, and the legislative analyst
has looked at the corporate tax structure as well.
Hill proposed capping the state research and development
credit, which a variety of companies use for work that
advances medicine and technology. Under the proposal, the
credit would be capped at two-thirds of a company's tax
liability in any given year, although leftover credit could be
claimed in future years. California businesses currently can
offset their entire tax bill using the R&D credit.
Vasché said the state has flexibility to scale back because
the credit is high compared with other states. The move would
generate an estimated $330 million more a year.
"There's a good federal R&D credit already
available," he said. "We're not really sure what the
state credit on top of the federal gives you in terms of
increased R&D spending in California."
High-tech businesses worry the move could dampen investment in
a state known for its high corporate tax rate.
R&D credits are "the lifeblood of innovation, not
only in Silicon Valley but in California," said Kirk
Everett, a lobbyist for the Silicon Valley Leadership Group,
which represents executives.
Tax experts defend tax expenditures as a powerful tool that
can encourage spending and stimulate the economy, but caution
that lawmakers and policymakers must weigh that benefit
against the loss of funding on public programs, such as cuts
to public education.
"If you're thinking about cutting spending, you're also
thinking about cutting benefits," said Alan Auerbach, an
economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley.
"It would be worth thinking about programs that are
running through the tax system – whether they're meeting
social objectives."
Judy Lin -
jlin@sacbee.com
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Copyright 1999-2008, California Coastal Coalition
Phone: (760) 944-3564
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