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TPPN: January 31, 2008
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TPPN: September 27, 2007
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TPPN: August 16, 2007
TPPN: August 02, 2007
TPPN: July 19, 2007
TPPN: July 05, 2007
TPPN: June 21, 2007
TPPN: June 07, 2007
TPPN: May 24, 2007
TPPN: May 10, 2007
TPPN: April 26, 2007
TPPN: April 12, 2007
TPPN: March 29, 2007
TPPN: March 15, 2007
TPPN: March 01, 2007
TPPN: February 15, 2007
TPPN: February 01, 2007
TPPN: January 18, 2007
TPPN: December 21, 2006
TPPN: December 07, 2006
TPPN: November 22, 2006
TPPN: November 09, 2006
TPPN: October 26, 2006
TPPN: October 12, 2006
TPPN: September 28, 2006
TPPN: September 14, 2006
TPPN: August 31, 2006
TPPN: August 17, 2006
TPPN: August 03, 2006
TPPN: July 20, 2006
TPPN: July 06, 2006
TPPN: June 22, 2006
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TPPN: May 25, 2006
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TPPN: April 27, 2006
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TPPN: March 30, 2006
TPPN: March 16, 2006
TPPN: March 01, 2006
TPPN: February 15, 2006
TPPN: February 01, 2006
TPPN: January 18, 2006
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TPPN: December 28, 2005
TPPN: December 14, 2005
TPPN: November 30, 2005
TPPN: November 16, 2005
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TPPN: October 19, 2005
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TPPN: September 21, 2005
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TPPN: August 24, 2005
TPPN: August 10, 2005
TPPN: July 27, 2005
TPPN: July 13, 2005
TPPN: June 29, 2005
TPPN: June 16, 2005
TPPN: June 15, 2005
TPPN: June 01, 2005
TPPN: May 18, 2005
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TPPN: April 20, 2005
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TPPN: March 23, 2005
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TPPN: February 23, 2005
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TPPN: January 25, 2005
TPPN: January 17, 2005


TPPN Archive
TPPN is issued every other
week by the Texas Public
Policy Foundation



Previous TPPNs are
archived online at:
www.TexasPolicy.com
January 18, 2006


Wohlgemuth joins Foundation team

- Fort Worth Star Telegram

Craddick tells orientation more accountability needed in bilingual ed

- Brownsville Herald

Gingrich addresses Policy Orientation

- Fort Worth Star Telegram

Low-income kids need choice, says Leininger at Policy Orientation

- Fort Worth Star Telegram

Sharp addresses taxes at Policy Orientation

- Quorum Report

Schlomach urges commission to replace property taxes with sales taxes

- San Antonio Express-News

Taxes addressed at Policy Orientation

- Austin American-Statesman

 
Notable 'Quote'

'When there is an income tax, the just man will pay more and the unjust less on the same amount of income.'

- Plato

 


Student achievement increases 28 percent in public schools when public schools compete with private schools – without any increase in public school spending.

- Legislators Guide to the Issues (Education Policy)

Twelve states that implemented income taxes during 1957-1999 experienced an average 37.2 percent overall tax increase, compared to 10.5 percent in states without income taxes.

- Legislators Guide to the Issues (Fiscal Policy)

 

Click Here to Refer a Friend
 

What's New?


Keynote Speeches Available Online
Listen online or download MP3s of the addresses

Weren’t able to attend the Policy Orientation? Now you can listen to the keynote addresses online, or download MP3s for playback later. Hear Texas House Speaker Tom Craddick, Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell, Texas Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, former US House Speaker Newt Gingrich, and John Sharp, chairman of the Tax Reform Commission. Next week, the panel discussions will also be available.

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A Policy Review
Big Taxes, Big Government
What Income Tax Advocates Really Want
By Byron Schlomach, Ph.D., Chief Economist
Director, Center for Fiscal Policy Studies

Believe it or not, according to some armchair-sages, bigger government extracting more resources from the economy will build a healthier and more prosperous middle class.

In the course of taking testimony around the state, the Governor’s Texas Tax Reform Commission heard this idea espoused by more than a few. Just how such a scheme would work, though, is a bit of a mystery.

Perhaps their idea is that government jobs pay well and more government employment would grow the middle class. In that case, maybe we should tax all private activity at 100 percent and have the state employ everyone. Then we could all be middle class, right?

Of course, this is silly on its face, but it would be easy to infer this view from the presentations of income tax advocates who insist that Texas’ state and local governments need more of your money. They argue that piling new types of taxes on the backs of taxpayers would allow our sales and property tax burdens to fall.

Texas does have a higher than average sales tax burden and a higher than average property tax burden, but no income tax. Interestingly, in the lists of states with high sales and property tax burdens presented in El Paso by an income tax advocate, both New York and Illinois have higher sales and property tax burdens than Texas. Not revealed by the presenter is that both states also have the income tax.

When you look at the evidence, it is obvious the real problem in Texas (and elsewhere) is that government continues to grow. In other words, government in Texas, especially school districts, has a spending problem, not a revenue problem.

In just over a decade (1993 to 2004), inflation-adjusted sales tax revenue per Texan increased over 15 percent. Inflation-adjusted property tax revenue per Texan increased over 24 percent. So where, oh where, could the revenue problem be?

By 2002, state and local government took up 9.4 percent of Texans’ personal income, not far from the 10 percent high in the early 1990s and just under the total size of all levels of government, including the federal government, early in the 20th century.

Yet this is apparently not enough government for some. These folks, extraordinary in their own minds, think the rest of us are not generous enough, concerned enough, caring enough, or smart enough to keep our own earnings, to spot real need, or help others as necessary. Maybe they think we just do not have the intelligence to manage even our own affairs.

Like the philosopher kings in Plato’s Republic, if they were just given total control with the violent coercive power of government in their hands, the world would be a near-perfect place. Or so they believe.

The facts demonstrate that no nation in the world, and no state in the United States, ever increased its middle class through big government or class warfare. The middle class is not nourished by high taxation levels or big government. It is grown in the fertile soil of real economic activity originating in the private sector. Government does have an important role acting as an impartial enforcer of impartial rules, but not arbitrarily selecting winners and losers.

When it comes to the size of state and local government, Texas is near the middle of the states. With rising personal income, there is no reason to think government’s burden should rise. There is every reason to expect it to shrink because needs are falling when personal income increases. We have today more capacity to take care of problems without government than we ever have before.

Texans are better, individually and collectively, than big government. And far better off.

Byron Schlomach, Ph.D., is the chief economist and director of the Center for Fiscal Policy Studies at the Texas Public Policy Foundation.

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Upcoming
Events

January 27, 2006
Levin to address the U.T. School of Social Work
Click here for more information.

February 09, 2006
Brooke Rollins addresses Parker County Republican Women
Click here for more information.

February 14, 2006
Policy Primer -- Immigration: What Role For The States?*
Click here for more information.

February 16, 2006
Sullivan to address Abbott Family Leadership Conference in Austin, Texas.
Click here for more information.

February 17, 2006
Brooke Rollins addresses Abbott Family Leadership Conference
Click here for more information.

March 06, 2006 — March 07, 2006
Patterson addresses the National Summit on Recruiting and Retaining Teachers
Click here for more information.

March 14, 2006
Policy Primer -- School Finance: Getting A STAR For Students*
Click here for more information.

April 11, 2006
Policy Primer -- Taxing Texans: Preparing For The Special Session*
Click here for more information.

April 21, 2006
Patterson addresses the Austin Association Bench/Bar Conference on School Finance
Click here for more information.

May 02, 2006
Policy Primer -- Efficient Education: Accounting & Spending*
Click here for more information.

Speakers Bureau

The Texas Public Policy Foundation has long been recognized as more than just a think tank for Texas, but also a valuable source of information and ideas for decision makers, legislators, media and the public.

The Texas Public Policy Foundation's Speakers Bureau is a natural extension of that resourcefulness.

Learn more about the Speakers Bureau!

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The Foundation operates only through the generous donations of friends and benefactors from around Texas and the United States, and even the smallest of donations can be used to accomplish great things for the future of our beloved state.

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It is quick, easy and secure! Click here!

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