Published
5 years agoon
The final pages of the 2020-21 budget that Gov. Gavin Newsom proposed this month contain arguably its most important factor — an utter dependence on taxing a relative handful of high-income Californians.
Personal income taxes, the budget projects, will generate $102.8 billion during the fiscal year that will begin on July 1, or slightly over two-thirds of general fund revenues, and 47% will come from the top 1% of California’s taxpayers who file about 15,000 tax returns in a state of 40 million people.
The rich can take care of themselves but being so dependent on so few people is dangerous from a fiscal standpoint, particularly since their incomes largely stem from investment earnings, such as those from the stock market, which can go up and down like an elevator.
It’s called “volatility” and it means that were another recession to hit, California’s budget would be clobbered, with projected revenue drops of about $25 billion a year. The state’s “rainy day fund” would cover only a fraction of that decline.
There’s another aspect to being so dependent on the rich to finance services that mainly serve middle- and low-income Californians. Wealthy taxpayers could — and some already have — simply move to another state and take their income-generating investments with them.
The potential for such an exodus increased a couple of years ago when a Republican-dominated Congress passed, and President Donald Trump signed, a federal tax overhaul that, among other things, capped the deductibility of state and local taxes at $10,000.
It increased the net impact of state and local taxes on high-income taxpayers, thus creating another reason to flee high-taxing states such as California for states that levy low or no income taxes, such as Nevada and Florida.
Not surprisingly, the Democrats who dominate high-taxing states complained loudly about the $10,000 limit, openly fearful that it would entice the wealthy to migrate.
Newsom Sets New Tone for California, White House Partnership
Walters: Democrats Overreach on Recall, Miss Valid Point
California Mobilizes National Guard Amid Concern Over Unrest
How California’s Budget Depends on Staggering Wealth Gap
Democrats Liken Newsom Recall Effort — a Legal Option in California — to Extremist ‘Coup’
Walters: California’s Technology Woes Deepen