Posted Online: Posted online: February
7, 2007 1:42 PM Print publication date: 02/08/2007
Big biz, small biz: Blago may have tax for you Comment
on this story
By Scott Reeder, sreeder@qconline.com
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SPRINGFIELD -- Gov. Rod Blagojevich is reportedly
considering a gross receipts tax on Illinois businesses to pay
for a plan to provide state-subsidized health insurance to
state residents without coverage.
Specifics on the proposal are few and far between, but
already representatives of the Illinois business community are
up in arms. Regardless of whether the gross receipts tax would
be an additional levy or a replacement for the corporate
income tax, they are expressing ardent opposition.
Administration spokeswoman Becky Carroll declined comment
on the matter, saying Illinois could hear details of the
state's finances when the governor makes his March 7 budget
address.
Depending on its final form, a gross receipts tax could hit
every business in the state, from barbers to manufacturers.
The barber, for example, would pay the gross receipts tax on
whatever he took in, likely apart from any income tax he might
have to pay.
Even if the business was losing money, the gross receipts
tax could apply.
"I'm hearing from many people who have dealings with the
administration that this is being looked at," said Ralph
Martire, executive director of the Center for Tax and Budget
Accountability.
Other private sector individuals knowledgeable in the
budgeting process also say they are hearing that the
administration is seriously looking at this type of tax.
Business lobbyists contend a gross receipts would be passed
to consumers, and in the case of manufactured products could
add significantly to the cost of finished goods.
"You could go from your raw material to your final product
and it could get taxed five times in-between." said Kim
Maisch, Illinois director of the National Federation of
Independent Businesses. "The concept of a gross-receipts tax
is really anti-free enterprise."
Ms. Maisch's husband, Todd, a lobbyist for the Illinois
Chamber of Commerce, added, "A 1 percent gross receipts tax
would boost the price of a gallon of gasoline by 10 or 15
cents a gallon because the farmer with the oil well pays it,
as does the refiner and the distributor and the gas station.
One percent doesn't sound like much, but it adds up very
quickly."
Consumers would avoid paying the higher prices caused by
this tax by traveling out of state to make major purchases or
using the internet more extensively when shopping," Kim Maisch
said.
"When you are a border community it is just devastating. We
aren't talking about driving across the river for a pack of
cigarettes. We are talking about driving three miles over to
Iowa to buy a $60,000 piece of equipment because Iowa doesn't
have this tax and the buyer could save 5 percent on the
purchase -- this is huge," Kim Maisch added.
During his inaugural address last month, Gov. Blagojevich
said, "We can expand access to health care so that not just
kids get coverage, but every family member has access to
affordable, quality health care.
"Today in Illinois 20 percent of adults, 1.4 million
people, are still uninsured. And those who have insurance, the
other 80 percent, are forced to pay higher premiums to cover
the costs. A family cannot build a better life if they are
burdened by the constant rise in health-care costs."
While few would dispute the desirability of the goal, a
state-subsidized program to provide health insurance would
likely cost billions.
The governor has already ruled out raising personal income
taxes or the state sales tax. Without those taxes in play,
this leaves some sort of tax on the business community the
most likely proposal, said Kim Maisch.
"Why should it fall on the Illinois business community to
pay for the cost of insuring these people?" she said.
If the governor's proposal includes a gross receipts tax
and leaves the corporate income tax on the books, the new
tax's constitutionality is a bit of an open question.
Under the Illinois Constitution, the current income tax
paid by businesses cannot be raised without increasing the
income tax paid by individuals.
Politically it is always easier to raise taxes on
businesses than individuals, so the framers of the
constitution created a ratio to protect Illinois business,
said Charles Wheeler III, who covered the drafting of the
state constitution for the Chicago Sun-Times. He now teaches
public affairs reporting at the University of Illinois at
Springfield.
The state is currently at the mandated maximum ratio is 8
to 5 which now equates to a 4.8 corporate income tax and a 3
personal income tax.
"If they were to pass this gross receipts tax, I don't
doubt that someone would immediately challenge the tax in
court. The administration may call it something other than an
income tax. But I think they would have a hard time making a
case for this not being a backdoor tax that violates the
spirit of the state constitution," Todd Maisch said.

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