posted on February 6th, 2015 by
Kelly McCutchen
The Georgia House of Representatives
has presented legislation to help transportation funding. Its road to
legislative success is already potholed with protests – from local government
and education officials to those worried about higher taxes and more.
As with the debate over the 2012
transportation sales tax referendum, the Georgia Public Foundation agrees the
state requires greater funding – for needs, not “nice-to-haves.” We have
provided detailed evidence of statewide needs that will cost a minimum of $1
billion a year.
From a fiscally conservative
viewpoint, it’s always better to prioritize existing spending rather than raise
taxes. As the Foundation has pointed out several times, a good starting point
is the more than 40 percent of transportation taxes that are not dedicated to
transportation. Every plan has critics, but accountability requires those who
dislike this option to find other spending cuts or accept raising taxes.
We have consistently promoted two
principles: All gas taxes should be spent on transportation and everyone who
uses the roads should pay. The House proposal generally gets these principles
right by swapping sales taxes for more predictable, dedicated excise taxes and
adding a new annual fee for alternative fuel vehicles.
Can the proposal be improved?
Certainly. We will share our ideas at the Foundation’s next event on February
18, “Transportation Funding Matters.”
What makes the transportation
funding debate so complicated is Georgia’s current mix of motor fuel taxes: an
excise tax on each gallon of fuel and additional state and local sales taxes
applied to the price of each gallon of fuel.
The Transportation Funding Act would convert this mix of taxes into a single state excise
tax of 29.2 cents per gallon, based on the average retail price of gasoline in
Georgia over the last four years. For reference, that’s more than the 27.5
cents per gallon Georgians paid in 2014, but less than the 29.4 cents per
gallon in 2012.
Gas taxes should be dedicated to
transportation. The practice of state and local governments diverting these
funds to other non-transportation purposes for many years led to the current
dilemma; correcting it is neither easy nor simple.
Exempting motor fuels from sales
taxes would shrink the state and local sales tax base by about 11 percent, on
average. The effect would vary greatly at the local level, from as low as 1.4
percent to as high as 53 percent.
As a partial remedy, the proposal
would create a new local excise tax that helps cities and counties replace lost
sales tax revenue. Missing – and needing addressing – is a mechanism that would
reduce the state gas tax to offset the increase at the local level.
Local governments have a pressing
incentive to convert to an excise tax: Gas prices dropped more than 40 percent
over the past few months; they stand to lose more than $200 million in sales
tax revenue if gasoline remains around $2.00 per gallon.
Legislators have promised local
governments additional transportation funding for transit and increased state
matching grants. This would also help offset the local loss of revenue, but
these funds are subject to the state budget process, so local governments are
understandably not overly excited.
It’s important to put protests about
local education funding cuts in context. Exempting motor fuels would mean $188
million less for future capital projects. The amount is about 1 percent
of the last year’s total K-12 revenues of $17.9 billion. This does not
count the several hundred million dollars of new education funding in the past
two state budgets, $35 million in new funding for the Governor’s program
to enhance broadband access in schools, or revenue reductions caused by
plunging gas prices.
Georgia taxpayers have prioritized
billions of dollars on education infrastructure over the last 15 years. Even
after the reductions, more than $1.3 billion would continue to be available
each year for school construction. Now, however, it’s time to prioritize
transportation. Making do with 1 percent less revenue going forward is not
unreasonable. If this is unacceptable, it will require a tax increase.
The House proposal is a good start.
It needs adjustments, but few legislative proposals pass as-is. For now,
citizens and legislators must ignore the spin from special interest groups on
both sides of the debate. Let’s be honest about the tough choices that are
required and take the time to get the facts and the plan right.
Kelly McCutchen is president of the
Georgia Public Policy Foundation.
Current
and Proposed Motor Fuel Taxes
Revenue
(in millions)
|
Cents
Per Gallon equivalent
|
|
Dedicated
to Transportation:
|
||
Excise
Tax
|
$450
|
7.50
|
State
Sales Tax
|
$540
|
9.00
|
Dedicated Total
|
$990
|
16.50
|
Undedicated
to Transportation:
|
||
State
Sales Tax
|
$180
|
3.00
|
Local
Sales Tax
|
$511
|
8.52
|
Undedicated
Total
|
$691
|
11.52
|
Current Motor Fuel Taxes
|
$1,681
|
28.02
|
Proposed Motor Fuel Taxes
|
$1,752
|
29.20
|
Notes:
If
we reduced our gas tax to the 16.5 cents per gallon that is dedicated to
transportation, we would rank 49th lowest.
The
proposed excise tax rate of 29.2 is based on the four-year average
retail price of gasoline in Georgia.Total motor fuel revenues were $1,764
million in 2012 based on a rate of 29.4 cents per gallon.
Does
not include local excise taxes of up to 6 cents per gallon.
Calculations
assume 1 cent per gallon = $60 million and one percentage point of sales
tax = $180 million.
|
Source:http://www.georgiapolicy.org/clearing-up-confusion-over-transportation-funding/
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