Salem
News…
Clean
up tax breaks, loopholes
September 5, 2012
When
Ohio had a corporate franchise tax,
companies were able to write off losses against future income. The idea
was
that the companies would generate taxable profits in the future.
Ohio
eliminated the franchise tax in favor of
the commercial activity tax. However, the state never eliminated the
write-offs
against future income even though future profits are no longer taxed.
This
is one of 128 tax loopholes, some dating
back nearly a century, that a variety of think tanks that cross party
lines
pointed out last year. Finally, at the prodding of Gov. John Kasich,
the state
is about to address the $7.4 billion in tax credits, deductions and
exemptions
granted yearly.
A
push is now under way for a review process
that would include a disclosure of who benefits from the loophole and
what the
beneficiaries provide the state in return. An automatic sunset to
loopholes is
part of the proposal.
The
Buckeye Institute for Public Policy
Solutions, the Center for Community Solutions and the Greater Ohio
Policy
Center called for eliminating what have become known as "tax
expenditures" in May of 2011. Nine metropolitan chambers of commerce
threw
their support behind the issue. Policy Matters Ohio joined the cause
with
testimony during a Senate Ways and Means Committee meeting in December.
The
Buckeye Institute and the regional chambers
are conservative; the other groups are liberal. Naturally, they do not
agree on
what to do with the money if loopholes are eliminated.
The
beauty in Kasichs aim is that this would
not result in more revenue for the state. Every loophole eliminated
would
result in an income tax cut worth the same value. This is on top of the
income
tax cut that Kasich wants in exchange for a "frack tax" on oil and
gas operations.
Tax
loopholes allow people and businesses to
escape paying their fair share to support state government. Thats
really no
different than writing a check for a wasteful government program which
is why the
term "ax expenditure" was created…
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the rest of the article at Salem News
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