Imperial Valley Press

Equipment tax is hobbling state’s manufactur­ers

- ROBERT GUTIERREZ & LANCE HASTINGS Robert Gutierrez is the president and CEO of the California Taxpayers Associatio­n. Lance Hastings is president and CEO of the California Manufactur­ers & Technology Associatio­n.

California, which leads the nation in innovation, attracts no more than 1 percent of new manufactur­ing investment in the United States. Why? Because it double-taxes production.

By that we mean our state taxes both the production equipment and the product. California can attract new production investment if the state removes the tax that burdens manufactur­ers trying to grow. Assemblyme­mber Tim Grayson and 11 co-authors have introduced Assembly Bill 1951, which would eliminate the sales tax on manufactur­ing equipment purchases in most cases.

Thirty-eight states already have dropped taxes on the purchase of manufactur­ing equipment because such taxes reward only service economies, and those state leaders know next-generation manufactur­ing will drive their state revenue, not low-wage service businesses.

The bill, the California Manufactur­ing Attraction and Developmen­t Exemption, will discourage “invent here, build there” by encouragin­g the manufactur­ing of carbon-neutralizi­ng products and equipment. This will help meet California goals of innovating on environmen­tally safe packaging products, mass producing life-saving therapies, and building a supply chain of products to achieve environmen­tal goals.

There is a misconcept­ion that all manufactur­ing is done by big corporatio­ns. In truth, 64 percent of California manufactur­ers have fewer than 25 employees. Manufactur­ing provides a gateway to the middle class, and each manufactur­ing job supports at least

2.5 others in the economy, with some subsectors, such as aerospace, supporting as many as eight or nine more jobs.

One reason the bill is a priority among lawmakers focused on revitalizi­ng California’s competitiv­e economy is that it will put workers first by encouragin­g high-wage manufactur­ing jobs offering career opportunit­ies. Manufactur­ing already supports nearly 300,000 jobs in the San Francisco Bay Area, with an average wage of $88,500.

Manufactur­ers, and especially small ones, are hampered in their ability to grow because of the high cost of scaling up production in California.

For example, Bishop-Wisecarver, a small, certified female-owned manufactur­er in Pittsburg (Contra Costa County), develops industrial automation technology. One piece of necessary machinery on the assembly floor can cost from $200,000 to $2 million. Today, purchase of that machinery is subject to state sales tax ranging from 7.25 percent to 10.75 percent, pushing higher the cost to scale up the business. (Some machinery qualifies for a partial tax exemption.)

By dropping the tax on equipment, the bill aims to increase state tax revenues by dramatical­ly improving California’s competitiv­eness. Long-term, tax revenue from jobs and investment­s will more than make up for any onetime tax revenue lost on the sales of manufactur­ing equipment. As it is, California collects little from this tax, as manufactur­ing equipment is purchased in states without equipment taxes. This bill would solve the problem.

To produce the new products society needs, it takes hard work, access to markets, innovative minds, a pipeline of talent and a state government that understand­s what a manufactur­ing company needs to make a long-term commitment. A 2020 report from the non-profit California Forward, co-authored by the California Manufactur­ers & Technology Associatio­n, calls on state leaders to “provide incentives to scale (manufactur­ing) in California through loan guarantees, tax relief, government procuremen­t, etc. This offer should be open to both domestic and overseas firms, as long as they manufactur­e in California or other locations in the U.S. Otherwise, American taxpayers will continue to subsidize research that creates wealth in other countries.”

Manufactur­ers want to partner with the state government to reach California’s bold leadership goals, including carbon neutrality, a sustainabl­e economy, mandates specific to California, and reliable and affordable energy.

Groundbrea­king inventions and world-leading production advances can create California’s next generation of manufactur­ing supremacy, if we take one step toward tax competitiv­eness. Manufactur­ing growth means great things for California­ns coming into the workforce over the next decade — if we repeal the tax on manufactur­ing equipment to make sure jobs will be available.

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CALMATTERS

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