Tax and Budget

January 20, 2012 by Sean O'Leary, Ted Boettner
Analysis of Governor’s FY 2013 Budget Available

Governor Tomblin’s FY 2013 budget will give West Virginia a small surplus but the state could head for red ink in the near future as expenditures for the state’s correction system as well as Medicaid grow, and revenue from the business franchise tax is reduced to 0%. Read the report.

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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 19, 2011 by Sean O'Leary
Will the Business Personal Property Tax Deter a Cracker Plant?

Today's Daily Mail had an article about a proposed tax incentive designed to lure a potential "ethane cracker" to West Virginia. The proposal would reduced the assessment rate for property taxes from 60% to 5% for the cracker facility. This would dramatically lower the facility's property tax burden, to the tune of about $500 million over the next…

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December 19, 2011 by Ted Boettner
OPEB Cap Costs Public Employees $5 billion

In his column this morning Phil Kabler briefly noted that the result of capping the state's contribution to retiree health insurance was "that the burden was shifted onto current and future retirees." This is something I wrote about last week, so it was nice to see this basic point acknowledged in print. Another point that has…

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December 18, 2011 by Sean O'Leary
West Virginia Economic Development Funding: The Role of Federal Earmarks

WVCBP Policy Analyst Sean O'Leary and Vice President Dr. Karen Kunz recently co-authored "West Virginia Economic Development Funding: The Role of Federal Earmarks" which examines the use of federal earmarks to fund economic development in West Virginia. The study discusses the state's dependence on federal earmarks and how this affects its ability to attract other…

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December 7, 2011 by Ted Boettner
Solving the OPEB Problem is in Reach

Last night the Charleston Area Alliance hosted a discussion between Senator Brooks McCabe, PEIA director Ted Cheatham, and yours truly on how to address the state's growing OPEB (other post-employment benefits) liability. As readers may know, we published a detailed report on how the state should handle this problem back in January. I do not…

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October 26, 2011 by Ted Boettner
Tax and They Will Come

Richard Caldwell, a Wheeling native and the vice president for the Appalachian region of Audubon Engineering, said Charleston was chosen because of the availability of skilled and experienced workers. Availability of the Marcellus Shale natural gas reserve also was a contributing factor in the decision to come to West Virginia, he said. Last week, we issued a policy memo…

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