Revised setup would be boon to business investment
No one I know particularly enjoys paying taxes, but nearly
(if not) all will admit to their necessity in helping provide the government
services needed to keep our economy running. But not all taxes are created
equal – and not all taxes have the same effect on job creation and growth.
Indiana businesses are required to pay property tax on just
about everything they own. This includes all the things they need to conduct
daily operations and produce their product. Each year they must file a return
listing all their depreciable assets.
Property tax is then assessed on those
assets. This means they pay tax on every machine, device, tool or piece of
equipment they own – computers, office furniture, forklifts, laboratory
equipment, lathes, boilers, cash registers, robotic assemblers, you name it. It
is all taxed – every year.
But taxing personal property is taxing business investment.
The state is taxing everything needed to start, maintain and grow a business.
The consequence is that businesses moderate their capital investments because
of the tax implications.
Some states wisely never elected to impose the tax, and a
growing number of those that do are recognizing the detrimental effect and
either choosing to do away with it or finding ways to moderate it. While
Indiana’s business climate has many strong advantages over our neighbors, this
is an area in which the state is at a distinct disadvantage. Illinois is a
total fiscal mess, but it does not tax personal property. Ohio eliminated its
personal property tax in 2010. Michigan is moving to do the same. And even
though Kentucky taxes personal property, its average business property rates
remain lower than Indiana’s.
Currently, 12 states have no personal property tax at all.
At least another 20 have substantial exceptions and exemptions. In the best
research available, the 50 State Property Tax Comparison published annually by
the Minnesota Taxpayers Association, Indiana fares poorly with the fifth- and
sixth-highest effective tax rates in separate rural and urban categories.
Local officials are reluctant to give up what is, in some
cases, a substantial percentage of their tax base without replacement revenues.
It would take about $1 billion to replace the personal property tax collected
statewide each year. Thus, you can’t simply do away with the tax. Yet, the
economic development certainty is that Indiana needs to change its policy.
Please visit FindaPropertyTaxLawyer for more information.
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