Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Many in GOP take aim at state tax deduction

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Sahil Kapur of Bloomberg News; and by Brandon Mulder of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

WASHINGTON — Conservati­ve activists and House Republican leaders want to eliminate a trillion-dollar tax break that’s said to mostly benefit wealthy filers in Democratic states, a push that further threatens President Donald Trump’s hopes of winning bipartisan support for a tax overhaul.

Ever since the inception of the federal income tax in 1913, taxpayers have been allowed to deduct the state and local income taxes they pay from their taxable income. Anti-tax crusaders, including Grover Norquist, the president of Americans for Tax Reform, say the deduction represents bad policy.

“When you allow people to deduct their state and local taxes against the federal tax, you in effect subsidize tax increases at the state and local level,” Norquist said an interview. “The way to solve that is to get rid of the deduction. It’s good tax policy. It’s good tax reform.”

The deduction is a rare tax break for high earners that conservati­ves want to abolish and Democrats want to protect, a dynamic that scrambles the traditiona­l partisan divide.

“Republican­s don’t like the idea of subsidizin­g state and local government­s,” said Roberton Williams, an economist with the nonpartisa­n Tax Policy Center. “This is transferri­ng money from low-tax states to high-tax states. So this doesn’t rank high on the list of deductions and preference­s they like. The flipside of that is Democrats like the idea of states having more funds.”

Trump hasn’t taken a public position on the issue, and White House spokesman Natalie Strom declined to comment on his thinking. “He’s continuing to hear input from all sides” on a potential tax plan, she said, describing it as a high priority.

Ditching the deduction would raise federal tax revenue by $1.3 trillion over 10 years, according to the Tax Policy Center, which found that 90 percent of that increase would be paid by taxpayers who earn $100,000 or more.

The largest beneficiar­ies of the tax break are California, New York and New Jersey, all relatively high-tax Democratic-leaning states, which eat up more than a third of the nationwide benefits, according to the nonpartisa­n Committee for a Responsibl­e Federal Budget.

In the five states where residents benefit most, the deduction comprises at least 7 percent of residents’ adjusted gross income. For these states, which include Connecticu­t and Maryland, the average federal adjusted gross income falls between $73,000 and $94,000, with Connecticu­t having the highest figure, according to data from the Tax Foundation, a national tax policy nonprofit.

Arkansas ranks among the bottom 10 states nationally for income levels. Arkansas’ adjusted gross income averages $53,000, with residents using the state and local tax deduction typically seeing their federal taxable income reduced by about 3.7 percent.

In Arkansas, Benton County residents benefited most from the tax break in the 2013 tax year, having deducted on average more than $10,000 from their federal taxable income. Pulaski County followed, with that federal deduction typically falling between $8,000 and $10,000, according to the foundation’s figures.

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