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Who's killing the golden goose?
Legislative panel scrutinizes the
role of taxes in the loss of manufacturing jobs
by Robert Powell
Virginia Business
November 2005
Are taxes chasing manufacturers
away from Virginia? A study commissioned by the Virginia
Manufacturers Association
(VMA) suggests that state and local taxes are making
the state uncompetitive with several other Southern states
in attracting new companies. Of particular concern are
taxes on new machinery and tools. “Companies need
to able to reinvest and retool, and they should not be
penalized for it,” says Brett A. Vassey, the president
of the VMA.
The study is among information that a legislative panel
is sifting through as it wraps up two years of examining
the business climate for manufacturing in Virginia. The
Joint Subcommittee Studying Manufacturing Needs and the
Future of Manufacturing in Virginia is scheduled to conclude
its meetings by the end of this month and submit a summary
of its findings to the General Assembly before the beginning
of its 2006 session.
State Sen. Frank Wagner (R-Virginia
Beach) says manufacturing must be encouraged in Virginia
because the industry produces
many of the state’s highest paying jobs. “We
want to stem the tide and encourage manufacturers to
choose Virginia,” he says.
In addition to taxes, the panel is looking at other
issues affecting manufacturers, such as natural gas prices
and intellectual property policies at state universities.
TAX
PAID BY MANUFACTURERS
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Virginia
manufacturers paid $1.2 billion in state and local
taxes in fiscal year 2003. The largest share of
that tax bill was property taxes, including taxes
on real property, personal property and machinery
and equipment.
Property taxes
$755 million (63.7%)
Excise taxes $164 million (13.8%)
Sales tax on business inputs $140 millon (11.8%)
Corporate income taxes $44 million (3.8%)
Payroll taxes $44 million (3.8%)
Licenses and other taxes $37 million (3.2%)
Source: Ernst & Young
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There is no doubt that the number
of manufacturing jobs in the state is falling. Manufacturing
employment dropped
from its peak of 432,500 jobs in 1989 to 297,100 last
July. More than 67,000 manufacturing jobs have vanished
in just the past four years. Vassey says that decline
normally would alarm public officials but it has been
overshadowed in recent years by the state’s budget
problems.
But the subcommittee reports that not all the news
is bad. The average weekly earnings of production workers
in Virginia has increased from $435 in 1992 (7 percent
below the national average) to $622 in 2002 ($3 above
the national average).
A 2001 study on the state’s technology-intensive
manufacturers by Regional Technology Strategies Inc.
says that one reason for the falling number of manufacturing
employees is the increasing productivity. As manufacturers
become more efficient, they need fewer employees to
produce more goods.
The study commissioned by the Virginia Manufacturers
Association, however, paints a more troubling picture.
Completed in August by Ernst & Young, it compared
the tax burden of Virginia manufacturers to that of
companies operating in five other Southern states:
Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina and South
Carolina. “Those are the states we compete against
for an expansion or the recruitment of a new facility,” Vassey
says.
EFFECTIVE
TAX RATES
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Virginia’s effective tax rate for business property taxes was second
highest among six Southern states surveyed. The effective tax rate is
found by dividing state and local property taxes by value of business
property.
South Carolina (1.46%)
Virginia (1.18%)
Georgia (0.95%)
North Carolina (0.72%)
Kentucky (0.69%)
Alabama (0.65%)
Source: Ernst & Young
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The study found that the effective property tax rate
for businesses in Virginia (1.18 percent) was higher
than all of the states except South Carolina (1.46
percent) The effective business property tax rate was
calculated by dividing the revenue collected from real
and personal property taxes by the real and personal
property tax base in each state. The state with the
lowest effective tax rate was Alabama (0.65 percent).
The study notes that property
tax rates can have a big effect on the state’s competitiveness. “The
state’s relatively high property tax rate is especially
significant to manufacturers because property taxes account
for 63 percent of manufacturers’ total Virginia
business taxes,” the study says. That percentage
represents $755 million of the $1.2 billion in taxes
paid by manufacturers in fiscal year 2003.
Wagner says that the subcommittee may recommend setting
some parameters on taxes on tools and machinery. The
panel has found that assessment ratios used for these
taxes vary across the state.
Wagner says that the panel doesn’t want to interfere
with the revenue streams of local governments. But, he
added, the state should establish some standard for valuations
for machinery and tool taxes such as the Internal Revenue
Service’s depreciation schedule. “We don’t
want to choke the golden goose,” he says.
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