Back in July, I wrote a three-part series designed to identify the states with the greediest politicians.
- Part I was based on the top income tax rate in each state.
- Part II was based on the sales tax rate in each state.
- Part III was based on the burden of government spending in each state.
The results sometimes matched expectations. Florida generally looked very responsible, for instance, while New York looked rather profligate.
But other results were mixed. In particular, Alaska and Wyoming have very good tax systems, but they use energy taxes to finance bloated public sectors.
Today, let’s build on that research by reviewing two new reports than rank state economic policy.
First, we have the American Legislative Exchange Council’s 2020 Report on Economic Freedom. It’s based on several factors, but I can’t help but notice that the 10-best-ranked states include five with no income tax and three with flat taxes.
If you look at the 10 states at the bottom of the rankings, by contrast, they almost all have so-called progressive taxes. The only exceptions are Alaska, which (as noted above) finances a big government with energy taxes, and Illinois, which has a flat tax that currently is under assault by the state’s big spenders.
Now let’s look at the Tax Foundation’s newly released State Business Tax Climate Index.
As you can see, the top 10 is dominated by states that either don’t tax income, or have flat taxes, and the one state (Montana) with a so-called progressive tax compensates by having no sales tax.
Every state in the bottom 10, meanwhile, has a discriminatory income tax.
The two reports cited above measure different things. But both use good data and rely on sound methodology, so it’s very interesting to see which states score well (and score poorly) in both.
The states that crack the top 10 in both reports are South Dakota, Florida, New Hampshire, Utah, and Indiana.
And the states that languish in the bottom 10 in both reports are Louisiana (they should have adopted Bobby Jindal’s plan when they had a chance) and New Jersey (not exactly a surprise).
P.S. I recently wrote about Chris Edwards’ Report Card on America’s Governors. So if we mesh those results (New Hampshire was in the top category while New Jersey was in the bottom category) with today’s results, the folks in the Granite State get the triple crown while the folks in the Garden State get a booby prize.