by Dan Mitchell | Mar 7, 2026 | Blogs, States, Taxation
In 2015, in a column about the potential enactment of an income tax in the state of Washington, I explained that legislators should learn from Connecticut. The Nutmeg State enacted an income tax in 1991 and the net result has been higher...
by Dan Mitchell | Mar 5, 2026 | Blogs, Government Spending, States
If you follow state fiscal policy, there’s a very important battle happening in the Pacific Northwest. Democrats in the state of Washington are trying to muster the votes to push through an income tax. As depicted by the chart, the spending burden...
by Dan Mitchell | Feb 4, 2026 | Blogs, Economics, States
If asked to name the best policy development in recent years, the easy answer is Javier Milei’s rescue of Argentina. If asked the same question, but told to focus on the United States, there are two possible answers. The shift to school choice at the...
by Dan Mitchell | Jan 21, 2026 | Blogs, States, Taxation
Picking the worst state for tax policy usually means reviewing the foolish policies of states such as California, New York, and New Jersey, while contemplating the relative damage of levies such as personal income taxes, corporate taxes, and sales...
by Dan Mitchell | Jan 7, 2026 | Blogs, Taxation
I pointed out in both 2016 and 2022 that the United States has the most “progressive” tax system among rich nations. In other words, compared to other developed nations, the rich in America pay the largest share of the fiscal burden. Today, let’s...