Randall Pozdena

Raising tax rates of any kind risks impairing the private sector’s motivation to invest in activities that support job and income growth. However, the taxation of corporate income is particularly injurious to growth.

One reason is that taxation of corporate income is implicitly double taxation. After being taxed at the corporate level, the earnings of corporations ultimately are received by individuals as dividends and/or capital gains, where they are taxed again as personal income. In addition, corporate income taxes make retention of earnings difficult. This is especially hard on start-up and other companies that finance their growth through retained earnings. The tax effectively handicaps the ability of the corporation to bootstrap new growth.

Currently, the Federal tax rate on corporate income is 35 percent, and Oregon taxes that same income at 6.6 percent. The integrated, combined rate is 39.3 percent. But the Oregon legislature just voted for HB 3405 which will, among other provisions, raise the top corporate tax rate to 7.9 percent for 2009 and 2010, for a combined rate of 40.1 percent, with slightly lower rates in subsequent years.

This represents an increase in the rate by almost one percentage point and will put Oregon on par with Japan, which has the highest national rate in the world at 39.5 percent. Even tax-happy Sweden taxes corporations only at a 28 percent total rate.

The effects of such an increase in corporate tax rates have been well established by comparisons of the effects of differential tax rates across countries:

• Oregon’s growth rate will slip by 0.1 to 0.2 percentage points per year for as long as the tax increase is in place.*

• Over a ten-year period, Oregon will lose between 22,000 and 43,000 jobs, and $1.6 and $3.2 billion in personal income.*

Both estimates likely understate the negative impact of the policies. These estimates are derived using studies based on country comparisons. Tax competition among states is likely higher than that among countries, resulting in greater leakage of jobs to the states that tax corporate incomes at lower rates. It would not be unreasonable to see losses at least 50 percent higher than the figures above.

In addition, the projected job losses associated with the net income tax rate increases in this legislation do not take into account the other major provision of the bill, namely the increase in the corporate minimum tax from the current $10 a year to between $150 and $100,000 depending on gross Oregon sales. This provision is clearly damaging to the economy and hard to quantify without detailed tax return data. Ominously, because it taxes gross income rather than net income, the tax easily may exceed a company’s net income and can be tantamount to a net income tax of more than 100 percent. Some business owners may not have sufficient net income to pay the gross sales tax. This provision hits especially hard those businesses that use subcontractors and thus may eliminate even more jobs and inefficiently distort business practices.

* These estimates use as a baseline the May 2008 Office of Economic Analysis Oregon Economic Review and Forecast.

The responses of economic activity to corporate tax rates are derived from: “Tax and economic growth,” OECD Economics Department Working paper No. 620, 11 July 2008; and Lee, Young & Gordon, Roger H., “Tax structure and economic growth,” Journal of Public Economics, Elsevier, vol. 89 (5-6), pages 1027-1043, June 2005.

Randall Pozdena is a consulting economist who received his BA with Honors in Economics from Dartmouth College and his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley. He is also a member of the CFA Institute. Dr. Pozdena is a former professor of economics and finance, former research vice president for the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, and senior economist at the Stanford Research Institute. He has been a practicing consultant in Portland for 18 years and has served on numerous gubernatorial, academic, and non-profit boards, investment committees and commissions, including serving as an Academic Advisor to Cascade Policy Institute. The opinions expressed herein are those of the author and should not be attributed to any other individual or to any other organization with which the author is affiliated.

 

8 Responses to “Raising Oregon’s Corporate Income Tax RateWill Cost 43,000 Oregon Jobs”

  1. ron dyer June 30, 2009 at 1:40 am #

    Why isn’t everyone in Oregon screeming “Sales tax!”. It is an indirect sales tax, but it is still a sales tax. If the corporations pay it, the customers/patrons pay it; or the corporations cease to exist. If the customers pay it, the prices go up (it’s inflationary) and in these hard times, the sales will go down. Everybody loses including the tax collector and the success of the State of Oregon.

  2. William Aurich, DO, FACEP, FACOI August 3, 2009 at 8:09 am #

    Yes it is more of the same. “The soviet socialist republic of ORYGUN”. As I see droves of uninsured patients in the Coos Bay area primarily because there is no growth or industry in a recesssion with ~15% unemplyment locally I am dumbfounded by our legislators lack of forsite. It is time to move to another state.

  3. wayne klug August 31, 2009 at 10:57 am #

    Sign the petition to put this on the ballet so we can vote it out.

  4. Lane Ryan November 17, 2009 at 9:12 pm #

    Really? Can these corporations not just pay their dues and make it work? Does this tax study account for the fact the money will ultimately be redistributed throughout the economy?

  5. G.Fulford January 2, 2010 at 11:33 am #

    I agree with Lane Ryan. These huge corporations in Oregon, can’t pay more than $10 in taxes? And to do so will then cost this state jobs? This is insane. Columbia Sporting Goods, or Nike can’t afford to pay their fair share without having to fire people? While, I’m left having to pay almost $6,000 a year in property taxes? Seems like Oregon is in need of more than just a little ‘Change’ in their tax stucture.

  6. Terry Stewart January 26, 2010 at 1:56 pm #

    Anything left over becomes dividends and you pay fed and state tax on that amount. City of Portland and Multnomah County now have a business tax for doing business within their borders. Even if you don’t make any money, it is a minimum $100 each just for trying. Other cities are now going to try to do the same. So if you install a furnace, fix a plumbing leak, rent a house, sell a rental in Portland and only make $300, $200 minimum tax $100 to city $100 to county… Outside of the city? $100 minimum. Now this. Yes it is a write off, but if your income is low which it is for most small businesses right now, so what. Whatever is left, you still pay personal income taxes on. Double tax. Don’t forget. Most small businesses are incorporated. You think of corporate and assume we are not talking about small businesses that are struggling.

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  1. Cascade Policy Institute - Oregon Public Policy » Two Job-Killer bills threaten to destroy ten to twenty times more jobsthan Oregon’s so-called “stimulus package” has created - June 24, 2009

    [...] Raising Oregon’s Corporate Income Tax Rate Will Cost 43,000 Oregon Jobs by Randall Pozdena [...]

  2. Cascade Policy Institute - Oregon Public Policy » Two Job-Killer bills threaten to destroy 100 TIMES more jobs than Oregon’s so-called “stimulus package” will create - August 5, 2009

    [...] Raising Oregon’s Corporate Income Tax Rate Will Cost 43,000 Oregon Jobs By Randall Pozdena [...]

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