How Tea Party tax cuts are turning Kansas into a smoking ruin

Discussion in 'Politics' started by gwb-trading, Jul 13, 2014.

  1. A great piece, and a good find. I hope theses questions have not been overlooked, and are being saved for the debates between the two nominees.
     
    #301     Mar 20, 2016
  2. jem

    jem

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/rexsinq...hould-set-example-for-neighbors/#667dc1d52a94

    If this is correct... Income tax revenues have gone up, since the income tax cuts.

    Sales tax revenues are sluggish, mirroring a nationwide problem.

    ===


    What’s more, state revenues continue to grow more than two years following the historic tax cuts. According to Secretary Jordan, the State of Kansas brought $70 million more in 2015 than it did in 2014. Jordan adds that, while sale-tax revenues are more sluggish than hoped in Kansas, this reality mirrors sales-tax declines nationwide. Still, according to the Kansas Department of Revenue, gross domestic product (GDP) growth in Kansas remains steady, as the Sunflower State outpaces all of its neighbors except Colorado, with a 1.8 percent GDP increase in 2014 and a nation-leading 3.4 percent GDP increase in the fourth quarter of 2014.

    Plus, there’s more good news: Kansas’ unemployment rate is at 4.4 percent unemployment – well below the national average of 5.5 percent. Secretary Jordan pointed out that, in Southwest Kansas, unemployment rates are even lower and some communities are redoubling efforts to attract enough workers for all of the available jobs.

    None of this, of course, is in keeping with the sky-is-falling rhetoric that tax-cut opponents love to tout. And, to be sure, Kansas will face struggles like the rest of the nation does – struggles to boost those flagging sales-tax revenues, struggles to fund pensions year after year. The blame for these challenges cannot, however, be laid at the feet of a tax-cut plan that is bringing more people to the state, growing GDP and state tax revenues, growing jobs, and offering increased opportunities. According to Secretary Jordan, the year the tax cut became law, Kansas welcomed 8,666 first-time tax filers and AGI increased by $486 million. That is progress – and it’s one of the main reasons why Missourians are going to keep seeing our friends and neighbors head westward across State Line Road.
     
    #302     Mar 20, 2016
  3. Ricter

    Ricter

    The Wichita Eagle
    February 6, 2016 6:06 PM

    How well is state economy performing?

    Phillip Brownlee
    Eagle Editorial Board

    "Gov. Sam Brownback complained recently that the media don’t report how well his tax policies are performing, that they “don’t cover the results.”

    "So what would be a fair, objective way to gauge the results of those policies? How about the benchmarks that Brownback himself established?

    In 2012, the Governor’s Council of Economic Advisors, which Brownback leads, agreed on key indicators to monitor the state’s economy.

    “These economic metrics will allow us to determine the state’s relative economic position as it relates to the six-state region and the nation, and to monitor in a timely manner if our policies and initiatives are having the desired economic effect,” Brownback said at the time.

    "In other words, these should be the measures to judge the success or failure of his policies.

    "So how is Kansas doing on those measures? Not that well.

    "The council’s November “Indicators of the Kansas Economy” report showed Kansas trailing the region and nation in nearly every measure. This includes growth in population, gross state product, personal income, building permits, nonfarm employment, private-sector employment, private industry wage level, and private business establishment.

    "For example, at the time of the report, Kansas’ nonfarm employment was up 0.8 percent from the previous 12 months, compared with 1.3 percent growth for the region and 1.9 percent for the nation. (Kansas finished the year with 0.5 percent job growth, the ninth worst rate in the nation.)

    "Private-sector job growth was better, up 1.2 percent per the report, but it still trailed the regional average (1.4 percent) and nation (2.2 percent).

    "Another measure: Kansas had a 29.7 percent drop in building permits, compared with a 9.4 percent drop for the region and 7.2 percent growth for the nation.

    "There were a few bright spots. Kansas had a lower unemployment rate than the regional and national averages (though this has been the case since 2008). It also had higher per capita income than the region. Also, its manufacturing sector lost a smaller percentage of jobs from the previous year than the regional average (though the nation added manufacturing jobs last year).

    "Kansas’ economy is improving, as Brownback notes. But as his indicators show, the economies of most other states in the region and nation are improving faster – and they didn’t pass major income tax cuts that left their states with large budget shortfalls.

    "Brownback and his economic advisers decided in 2012 that the IKE report would be issued quarterly and serve “as the leading document” for evaluating economic progress. After publishing nine consecutive reports online, the council stopped posting them on its website after the March 2014 report – about the same time Brownback was facing a difficult re-election campaign.

    "Apparently those aren’t the results Brownback wants covered."

    Read more here: http://www.kansas.com/opinion/editorials/article58776263.html#storylink=cpy
     
    Last edited: Mar 30, 2016
    #303     Mar 30, 2016
  4. fhl

    fhl


    The above analysis brings to mind the old Milton Friedman saying of figures lie and liars figure.

    For example, per the charts linked in the article's analysis, growth in gross state product in Kansas was tanking before the tax cuts. After the tax cuts, Kansas gsp has turned around and headed back up. It was far below the other states before the tax cuts. Now it is almost even. The author of the articles grand conclusion from such statistics is that Kansas trails the other states avg, and is a proof that the tax cuts had no effect.

    It's really a shame that fraudulent analysis from the left has to continually be rebutted.
    If I was governor of Kansas, I'd just cut taxes and when anyone complained, I would start lining up legislation for tax cut #2. You know, like qe2 and qe3, for example. After eight years of continual qe's and economic stimulus packages, we're told that the US economy never quite reached escape velocity, but their economic policies are a success. And along with it, we have to read opinion pieces with fantasy analysis about Kansas tax cuts.

    How about taking a meat ax to school funding? That's my conclusion. One of the biggest wastes in the US is funding for teachers union members. Their pay has no bearing on test scores. They attempt to persuade that they need higher pay for better teaching, and at the same time refuse to allow for incentive pay for better pupil test score outcomes, complaining that other factors prevent test scores from rising. They hope that nobody will notice that gross inconsistency. If higher pay will not raise test scores, then the taxpayer is being bilked and teachers should get what the mkt provides. Not what their union bosses can extract from the taxpayer. If they can make more money elsewhere, then leave. Fat chance a union slob will ever find a job making more money in the free market where he's actually accountable for his production outcome.
     
    #304     Mar 31, 2016
  5. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Actually there is no rebuttal here. Kansas is a complete trainwreck. The Kansas economy only recovered slightly because the national economy recovered. However Kansas lagged (and still lags) in every measurement compared to it neighbors and other similar states.
     
    #305     Apr 1, 2016
  6. You're ignoring his major point, which is that they were lagging before the tax cuts. Correlation is not causation.

    I don't know enough about Kansas to get into this, and I don't care enough to research it. I am immediately skeptical of arguments along the lines of tax cuts are starving state government and wrecking education however. I've heard that line too many times.
     
    #306     Apr 1, 2016
  7. fhl

    fhl


    There is only one group of people who think Kansas is a trainwreck. The same people who think the keynesian economics the Federal government is using is a sterling success. You are showing your true colors.
     
    #307     Apr 1, 2016
  8. Then go move there and live the dream, John Galt.
     
    #308     Apr 1, 2016
  9. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    #309     May 2, 2016
  10. Ricter

    Ricter

    When your customers are broke you can't make sales.
    When your employees are dumb you can't make sales. (New!)
     
    #310     May 3, 2016