Study: New York's state and local tax businesses taxes are among the nation's highest

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13
Apr
2005

The effective state and local tax rate on businesses in New York is among the highest in the country, a study by the Council on State Taxation finds.

State and local business taxes in New York totaled an estimated $42 billion in 2004, according to the study. That represented 5.7 percent of New York's gross state product, while business taxes nationwide averaged 4.7 percent of gross product.

The study included estimates of property taxes, sales and excise taxes, gross receipt taxes, corporate income taxes, and payroll taxes. New York taxes were in the top five for allof those measures, ranking second-highest in property taxes, fifth-highest in gross receipt taxes, second-highest in corporate income taxes, and third-highest in payroll taxes.

Another recent study, by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, confirms that New York's taxes are by far the highest in the country.

The Federal Reserve study rejected the idea that New York's “social needs” explain that heavy burden. The "tax effort" required of New York's workers and businesses is 43 percent higher than the national average, according to the Federal Reserve study. That level is far above any other state; even the state with the second-highest tax effort, Connecticut, was only 19 percent above average, the Fed's study showed.

Tax effort measures how much state and local governments in each state collect in taxes, compared to the revenue-generating capacity of the state's economy. Federal Reserve economists also calculated "fiscal need" in each state. That index includes measures such as the poverty rate, the proportion of residents who are school-aged, and number of vehicle-miles traveled.

New York State's fiscal need was only 1 percent above the national average, the Federal Reserve study found. After adjusting for need, state and local government spending in New York is at least 35 percent above average in such major areas as education, public welfare, health/hospitals, highways, and police/corrections, the Federal Reserve study concluded.