The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Lawmakers consider cut to state sales tax

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

While the prospects of a landmark state income tax cut have dominated recent headlines, there’s no shortage of ideas at the Capitol for how to help consumers by trimming the sales tax.

Lawmakers from both parties have proposed reducing the 6.35 percent sales tax rate that’s been in place since 2011 while also seeking to create new exemptions or restore old ones.

Republican legislator­s also have taken aim at a controvers­ial 1percent surcharge on restaurant food and other prepared meals, hoping to suspend or repeal that four-year-old levy entirely.

And the top Democrat in the Senate says the best way to help consumers when it comes to the restaurant surcharge is to send the $60 million to $70 million it generates annually to municipali­ties to ease property tax burdens statewide.

The state’s second-largest source of revenue, after the income tax, the sales tax is expected to generate $5.1 billion this fiscal year, enough to cover nearly onequarter of the General Fund.

That’s up 17 percent from the $4.3 billion raised just three years ago, a surge many lawmakers charge has been fueled by skyrocketi­ng inflation. By 2025, that growth is projected to reach 25 percent.

Simply put, as the cost of goods and services rises, the sales tax ensures the state’s coffers benefit — and that a bad time for household and business budgets is made even worse.

“They are paying the price, literally,” said Rep. Holly Cheeseman of East Lyme, ranking House Republican on the Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee, who said many voters are watching the Capitol closely to see if state officials are sensitive to the growing cost of living. “People are very conscious of just how much they’re paying and where they are having to cut back.”

Minority Republican­s in the state House and Senate particular­ly have taken aim at the sales tax, introducin­g multiple bills to roll back the base rate of 6.35 percent.

Kevin Kelly of Stratford, the Republican leader in the Senate, wants to cap the sales tax rate at 5.99 percent, at least through June 30. Sen. Tony Hwang, R-Fairfield, proposed knocking it back to that lower level for the entire 2023-24 fiscal year.

Kelly told the CT Mirror in a recent interview that “Republican­s are focusing on kitchen-table economics, which are under considerab­le strain.”

The best way to do that, he added, is by helping as many households as possible, “by leaving the money where it belongs: in their wallets.”

And House Minority Leader Vincent J. Candelora of North Branford and others from his caucus want to permanentl­y link the sales tax rate to inflation. When the latter goes up, the rate comes down.

Gov. Ned Lamont, a Greenwich businessma­n and fiscal moderate, hasn’t weighed in on the sales tax issue yet. The governor, whose next biennial budget proposal is due to lawmakers Feb. 8, has focused his attention on the income tax.

Lamont has pledged to push for what would become the first cut in state income tax rates since the mid-1990s, which could deliver major relief to middle-income households. And on Monday, he unveiled plans to boost an income tax credit to help Connecticu­t’s working poor families.

Republican­s also want to reduce income tax rates. Both GOP caucuses endorsed one such proposal last year.

But because of the sales tax’s symbiotic connection to inflation, it has become the poster child for many legislator­s’ frustratio­ns with government’s swollen coffers.

Officials from both parties were shocked when state finances seemingly ignored the outbreak of the coronaviru­s and closed the 2020-21 fiscal year more than $1.7 billion in the black — an 8 percent% surplus and one of the largest in state history.

But that was driven largely by income tax receipts tied to a robust stock market, as well as pandemic-driven increases in emergency federal aid.

No one was prepared, though, for the mind-blowing $4.3 billion surplus Connecticu­t recorded last June 30, or the $3.2 billion cushion projected for the current fiscal year. The Consumer Price Index topped 8 percent for most of the 2022 calendar year and reached 9 percent% last June.

Income and business tax receipts continue to surge, but sales tax growth has emerged as a key contributo­r, and it’s not just Republican legislator­s who are concerned.

Rep. Bob Godfrey, a veteran Democrat from Danbury, introduced a bill to reduce the sales tax to 6 percent on an ongoing basis.

Other Democrats offered measures to carve out sales tax exemptions for aircraft and for certain types of book sales.

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