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Rostrum By DOROTHY O'NEILL, President, League of Women Voters of Illinois LWV calls for higher taxes with tax relief THE QUESTION for Illinois in 1983 is no longer whether we can afford to increase state taxes. If Illinois is to meet its obligations to education at all levels, provide a humane level of health and human services and maintain a transportation system that can safely and efficiently move its workers and products, more state money must be raised. Illinois has the capacity to increase its state taxes. In fact, the financial crisis in which Illinois finds itself today is due, in some part, to a series of tax cuts in recent years. Individuals, businesses and farmers benefit from sales, property and inheritance tax relief measures. These changes in the revenue system mean millions of dollars no longer go to the state, local governments and school districts. Figures compiled by the Taxpayers' Federation of Illinois for 1981 show that Illinois was average-to-low in tax burdens on individuals and business. In percent of income paid in state taxes (6.08 percent), Illinois was well below the average of the Great Lakes states, the major industrial states and the nation. Only in payments to the utility tax and the property tax did Illinois rank above average. Even so, in total state and local taxes per $1,000 of personal income, Illinois ranked below the average for the nation and the top 10 industrial states.
While Illinois was cutting taxes, other states were raising taxes. Thirty states raised state taxes in 1981; at least 21 states did so in 1982, and more are considering higher taxes in 1983. Of the 10 leading industrial states, only Illinois and Texas have not raised taxes at least once during the past two years. Illinois has not had a major state tax increase in 14 years. Illinois has paid a price for its low-tax status, however. It is apparent in the economic distress of the public schools and universities, in the reductions in medical benefits for the working poor and welfare recipients, in the losses in a broad spectrum of social services from low-income day care to mental health, in stiff increases in mass transit fares and in the deplorable condition of Illinois roads and highways. A report from the National Conference of State Legislatures ranks states on spending per $1,000 of personal income. It paints a graphic picture of the results of recent Illinois' "hold the line" budgets. In state and local spending for schools, Illinois ranks 48th in the nation; in state aid to schools, 41st; in state spending for universities, 46th; in state and local spending for health and hospitals, 44th; in state and local spending for streets and highways, 40th. In state and local government employment per 10,000 population, Illinois ranks 47th in the nation. It is obvious that the Illinois tax climate has not been responsible for the seriousness of the recession in Illinois. There are many factors not all them controllable by government that influence business investment decisions. Regional differences in construction, energy and labor costs are generally too large to be outweighed by any differences in state and local taxes. Indeed, a no-new-taxes policy may be the best way to assure that Illinois does not recover from the recession. The fiscal program supported by the League of Women Voters contains nothing new or dramatic; each element has been proposed many times over by special commissions, academic studies and, most recently, in parts of Gov. James R. Thompson's tax plan. The league's goal is to raise additional state funds in a fair manner, based on ability to pay, for all who live, work and do business in Illinois. The plan is this: To raise more money, the state should:
To provide tax relief, as soon as possible the state should:
May 1983 | Illinois Issues | 38
To reduce the amount by which taxes must be raised, the state should:
It costs $10,000 a year to keep a prisoner in a correctional institution more than the annual cost of attending a prestigious university. Money spent on rehabilitation and alternatives to incarceration for those who are not a danger to society could result in substantial savings. The best investment of all would come from increased support for education. Programs and services which are reduced in both quality and quantity will not prepare young people for taking productive places in an economy based on new technologies and international trade relationships. Low salaries for teaching staffs in lower and higher education will neither keep nor attract the best people to educate the citizens of tomorrow. The state should make bold efforts to improve the structure of government in Illinois such as:
To implement these proposals will obviously require more than the returns from a one-year surtax. The first priority must be to weather the current crisis and restore the services that have suffered a series of reductions. But we must also look to the future and make the investments that ensure healthy social and economic development in Illinois.□ May 1983 | Illinois Issues | 39 |
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