15.12.2010
Policy Points
Economic policy reports, blog postings, and media stories of interest:
15.12.2010
Policy Points
TaxVox analyzes the share of all estates subject to the estate tax at different points in time between 1934 and 2011 (estimated). If the tax deal currently under congressional consideration passes, just 0.2 percent of all estates — an estimated 3,600 estates in all — would be subject to estate taxes in 2011. From the blog:
The compromise tax bill worked out by President Obama and congressional Republicans would reinstate the tax for 2011 and 2012 with a $5 million exemption and a 35 percent tax rate. Though obviously a tax increase compared to what estates pay this year (i.e., nothing), that would be much less onerous for the wealthy than the $1 million exemption and 55 percent top tax rate that will take effect in January if Congress makes no changes. Absent congressional action, about 2 percent of estates would pay the estate tax; under the compromise agreement, less than a tenth as many would owe anything (blue dot). That 0.2 percent would be the smallest percentage of estates owing tax since at least 1934 (other than 2010, when the one-year hiatus exempted every estate).
15.12.2010
Policy Points
A new brief from the North Carolina Budget & Tax Center finds that even the most extreme budget reductions currently under consideration will require North Carolina to raise additional revenue to balance its fiscal year 2012 budget. From the report:
To close the gap between current service levels and anticipated revenues, Governor Perdue requested plans to reduce state funding for public schools, community colleges,and the UNC system by 5 and 10 percent, with all other state agencies asked to prepare an additional plan cutting state funding by 15 percent. The worst-case scenarios from all agencies, including agencies that provided budget-cut plans and those that did not, account for less than $2.6 billion of the total shortfall of $3.7 billion.
…
These estimates presume that revenues will grow at the historical rate of 5 percent—nearly twice the rate of growth in the current year—and that lawmakers will exempt North Carolina from federal tax law changes that are projected to reduce state revenues by $423million in the next budget year. If continued weakness in the economy reduces revenue growth to the same rate as this year and lawmakers choose not to exempt North Carolina from expected federal tax law changes, next year’s revenue shortfall would climb to $4.4 billion.
14.12.2010
Policy Points
Free Exchange offers the following map showing unemployment rates in America’s metro areas. Unemployment rates are especially high in metro areas located in the West, Midwest, and Florida.
