The Michigan Senate recently tabled a proposal by Gov. Rick Snyder to raise the state gas tax and vehicle registration fees. Republican lawmakers have reportedly countered with a tax increase proposal of their own.
Both sides are right to propose more road spending. State legislators, however, should ensure that any increase in transportation taxes is offset by cuts in taxes and spending elsewhere.
The governor's proposal is a mixed bag. To his credit, he is making Michigan’s roads a legislative priority, and he is tying new monies to gas taxes and registration fees — items akin to user fees for road use. Unfortunately, he would simply charge Michigan taxpayers an additional $1.2 billion a year: $728 million from a motor fuel tax hike (including a gas tax increase from 19 cents to 33 cents per gallon), and $508 million from an estimated 60 percent increase in the typical driver’s vehicle registration fees.
Levying the tax without other reforms is problematic. It digs into taxpayer pockets when offsetting spending cuts are possible elsewhere, permitting reductions to, say, the sales tax on gasoline (currently dedicated to non-road spending) or the state’s personal income tax.
Cutting the income tax is overdue. Recall that in 2007, the Legislature hiked personal income taxes from 3.9 percent to 4.35 percent — an 11.5 percent increase — with the promise that in 2011, the rate would be rolled back 0.1 percentage points per year until it reached 3.95 percent. It was then scheduled to drop to 3.9 percent in 2015.
The Snyder administration delayed that rollback until 2013 and canceled the subsequent reductions. Especially in light of a proposed gas tax hike, Michigan workers deserve better. Lowering the personal income tax rate by $1.2 billion, the amount of the proposed transportation spending increase, would imply a new rate of approximately 3.6 percent.
Can the Legislature cut $1.2 billion in general spending? The answer is yes. State Rep. John Proos, R-St. Joseph, has already proposed earmarking an estimated $130 million for road spending from current general fund dollars raised through sale taxes on fuel.
And legislators clearly think money is available elsewhere. For instance, the Senate has passed bills designed to effectively lower the 6 percent general sales tax for cars and recreational vehicles only. The Senate Fiscal Agency estimates that this exemption will lower revenues by $41 million in the first year alone and by as much as $233 million in fiscal 2023. Presumably, lawmakers could forgo creating this tax loophole and redirect the $41 million in implicit spending cuts to roads instead.
With this $171 million dedicated to roads, the state would not need to find the entire $1.2 billion to provide offsetting tax cuts. In particular, if the $171 million discussed above were deployed to lower the $508 million taxpayer burden produced by the proposed registration fees, the Legislature would need to find only $337 million more to offset the fee increase.
The following six suggestions are one way to fill this gap:
These cuts provide a total of $344 million in money that can be reassigned to roads, more than offsetting the remaining $337 million in proposed registration fees.
Of course, the $728 million in motor fuel taxes remains. We’ll deal with spending cuts equal to that amount in subsequent pieces; dozens of other ideas are available.
There’s a lot of good news surrounding the debate over road repair. Roads are now a priority, and lawmakers are not sold on a net tax and fee hike. The ideas listed above — with more to come — are designed to help keep it that way.
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