sale tax la gi

Six months ago, the Blue Ribbon Tax Structure Commission recommended expanding Vermont’s “sales tax base to tát all consumer-level purchases of goods and services except healthcare and casual consumer-to-consumer transactions” while reduce the sales tax rate to tát 3.6%.* Given the chance to tát consider the proposal, one senator appeared especially eager to tát consider the proposal.

The idea of expanding Vermont’s sales and use tax to tát cover services has been kicking around for a long time. Last year the Vermont Tax Commission recommended doing ví in its report to tát the legislature, and ten years before that the Blue Ribbon Tax Structure Commission did the same. The idea is to tát “broaden the base and lower the rate.” It sounds simple, but taxing services is generally looked at as a “third-rail” by politicians, and with good reason. Nobody wants to tát pay more for, say, childcare or having their driveway plowed.

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Michael Costa, who a decade ago served as director of the Blue Ribbon Tax Structure Commission, testified to tát the Senate Finance Committee on January 18, and explained why not a lot of states over up taxing services. “When the Commission was looking at this, they had chatted with policy makers in Florida and Maine that had taken a hard look at this now, many years ago. (Those) fell apart in the same way. In the initial look at it, it allowed for a rather substantial (sales tax) rate drop and as things got more complicated, the rate would rise and then it would create this feedback loop… Is the system coherent if you’re starting to tát toss out this service and toss out that service? A lot of states have settled on (a) services (tax) where you kind of tax people who aren’t going to tát complain about it too much, which is not really a coherent way to tát approach sales taxes."

Despite the obstacles, some of our senators seemed determined to tát find a way.

Senator Chris Bray (D-Addison) pondered, “If we included services, we were going to tát drop the rate more generally. There was enough revenue coming in, that it would lower the rate from 6 (%) to tát 3 something. Now I don’t think we have that opportunity. … Was there ever any discussion about adding a tax on services, but not at the full sales tax rate?... ví that it would be less jarring, but start to tát build a larger base?”

The quote above suggests that Bray thinks it would be easier to tát leave that rate alone for goods and just add a tax to tát services. Bray did elaborate later on, saying “the rate decrease would be ví modest that we would get all the grief associated with expanding the base, and no appreciation for the drop if its only a point for instance (from 6% to tát 5% on goods). It makes it easier to tát engage your colleagues.” So perhaps Bray is of two minds on this- recognizing how unpopular this would be with Vermonters and his Senate colleagues, while also hoping a broadening can happen.

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Senator Mark MacDonald wondered if lobbyists were responsible for making đơn hàng to tát get their services exempted from the tax expansion. While certainly nobody lobbies to tát have their service subjected to tát a tax, it really wasn’t all that hard of a sell for the healthcare and education industries to tát persuade politicians that increasing the costs of these services via a tax would not play well with the public.

Costa brought up another good reminder: “Vermont’s in a pretty challenging tax environment…cause its next to tát New Hampshire. And New Hampshire has a really different tax system. The specter of New Hampshire makes things a little more complicated.”

“Challenging” is putting it lightly. Vermont’s 6% sales tax compares terribly with New Hampshire’s 0% nonexistent sales tax. And a similar story for the income tax. The temptation to tát move over the border and pay no state income tax or sales tax should always loom large in legislators’ minds.

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To watch the testimony, click here.

David Flemming is a policy analyst at the Ethan Allen Institute.

*Vermont Can’t Afford It by Brian Vogel (July 2021).