Blog

February 29, 2012 by Sean O'Leary
CBO Says Stimulus is Still Boosting the Economy

A new report from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) shows that the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) or stimulus bill, has continued to boost the economy throughout 2011, and will continue to do so through 2012 and into 2013. According to the report, the stimulus increased employment in the 4th quarter of 2011 by between 400,000…

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February 27, 2012 by Sean O'Leary
No Income Tax Doesn’t = Low Taxes

There has been a lot of noise lately in the policy community about a new report out of Oklahoma, recommending the elimination of the personal income tax. The report claims that the nine states with no personal income tax have performed better economically than the nine states with the highest personal income taxes. The Institute on Taxation…

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February 16, 2012 by Sean O'Leary
Climate Change – How Important is the Tax Foundation’s State Business Tax Climate Index?

Last month the Tax Foundation released the 2012 edition of their State Business Tax Climate Index, a measure of how business-friendly a state's tax system is. The overall index is comprised of 5 sub-indexes, measuring the "business-friendliness" of a state's corporate income, individual income, sales, property, and unemployment insurance taxes. This year, West Virginia ranked 23rd, with…

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February 14, 2012 by Ted Boettner
Getting the Story Right: Mineral Taxation in Wyoming and West Virginia

Last week, I was asked to present before the Senate Economic Development Committee on our projected estimates regarding S.B. 182 - which creates the WV Future Fund proposed by Senate President Jeff Kessler. During the meeting, Mark Muchow, the Deputy Secretary of the WV Department of Revenue, also presented the committee with a history of…

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January 25, 2012 by Sean O'Leary
Extending Payroll Tax Cut and Unemployment Benefits Thousands of West Virginians

Last night, in his State of the Union address, President Obama asked Congress to pass an extension of the payroll tax cut without delay. The original tax cut, which reduced the employee share of Social Security taxes, expired at the end of 2011 and was extended for two months. Along with the payroll tax cut, Congress…

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January 11, 2012 by Sean O'Leary
Marcellus Revenues Already Offsetting Business Tax Cuts

We've brought up creating some sort of trust fund with the state's severance tax revenue time and time again, so it was good to read about state Republican legislators talking about a severance tax fund in the Gazette this morning. However, it was disappointing to see that their proposal was to use a severance tax fund to…

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January 6, 2012 by Sean O'Leary
Inequality Driven by Growing Shift Toward Capital Income

When we last talked about growing income inequality, the CBO had released a report showing that incomes for the richest households in the U.S. have been growing much faster than the incomes of the poor and middle class. Another study, this time from the Congressional Research Service (CRS), has confirmed that income inequality is on the…

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January 2, 2012 by Ted Boettner
Business Tax Cuts – No Free Lunch

While the state should be doing all that it can to stimulate economic growth and jobs, cutting business taxes is an inefficient, regressive and poor choice for creating broadly shared prosperity. As Sean has pointed out, there are much better ways to accomplish this goal. As AP points out today, the corporate net income tax…

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December 20, 2011 by Ted Boettner
Government Played Critical Role in Shale Gas Boom

Today, the Washington Post had an insightful op-ed highlighting the large and critical role federal spending played in the boom in shale gas drilling: Many often point to the shale gas revolution as evidence that the private sector, in response to market forces, is better than government bureaucrats at picking technological winners. It's a compelling story, one that…

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