Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Sid Salter: Decimals Aside, Tax Cuts Hit Historic Tax Structures.

While the typos in the tax compromise legislation sent from the State Senate to the State House of Representatives last week are garnering most of the attention from politicos, insiders and those who oppose aspects of the bill, let’s not lose sight of the significance of the structural tax changes the legislation could provide if signed into law.
The legislation provides a path to eliminating the state’s income tax. However, the typos in the bill deal with a core component—the speed with which income tax reduction or elimination can or should be accomplished.
But the compromise extends to other taxes as well, including the sales tax on groceries.
Sales taxes account for about 38.4% of state tax revenues. It is essential to reflect on how that tax originated. The Great Flood of 1927 fundamentally transformed the state's economy, which was on the brink of another economic disaster—the Great Depression. Agriculture struggled to recover after the 1927 flood, so the Great Depression dealt a second blow to Mississippi's troubled economy.
History recounts that at the beginning of 1932, the State of Mississippi had a whopping $,1,327.00 in the state treasury with accounts payable of nearly $6 million. Many Mississippi school teachers had not been paid in over a year and the pensions of the state’s Confederate Veterans were likewise unpaid.
Mississippi began 1932 with some $50 million in debt. In April 1932, one-fourth of the state’s agricultural lands – family farms – were sold for taxes. Tax sales held in 74 of the state’s 82 counties claimed roughly 400,000 acres on 40,000 farms from plantations to small acre homeplaces.
In that 1932 fiscal maelstrom, Mississippi Gov. Mike Conner proposed the nation’s first sales tax at three cents on the dollar. The Legislature gave him a two-cent tax that has since grown to a 7% sales tax.
Last week’s tax compromise offers a 2% reduction in the state’s sales tax on groceries. All sales taxes are regressive – penalizing the poor more than the wealthy – but after more than a quarter-century of political infighting, the proposed compromise offers some relief.
After the inflation endured on groceries during the Biden Administration and that promised by rising tariffs in the Trump Administration, any relief on grocery bills will be welcomed by Mississippi shoppers.
Mississippi’s individual income tax accounts for just over 30% of state tax revenues while the state’s property taxes primarily support local government sources.
Another intriguing facet of the tax compromise is an increase in the state’s gasoline tax. The tax compromise calls for adding a total of nine cents per gallon (CPG) to the state’s gas tax over the next three years. The only state with lower gas taxes than Mississippi is Alaska.
Mississippi’s current 18.4 cents per gallon state gas tax (CPG) is a flat tax. When we paid $3.965 a gallon for gas in 2008, the tax was 18.4 CPG. When we pay $2.42 per gallon at the pump this week, the state tax is still 18.4 CPG.
The only way the state takes in more revenue in gas taxes is for the volume of gas consumed to increase – and automobiles are now manufactured to require less fuel consumption than a decade ago.  The state fuel tax rates haven’t increased since 1987, the last time the state was particularly serious about improving our highway system.  
The federal fuel tax is also 18.4 cents per gallon and hasn’t changed since 1993. Neither the federal nor state fuel taxes have kept pace with inflation. Indexed for inflation, both federal and state fuel tax rates are insufficient to adequately build and maintain those infrastructures – but this increase will be a dramatic improvement in Mississippi over time.
The bill creates a fifth tier in the state’s Public Employees Retirement System for newly hired state employees after March 1, 2026. In that plan, 4% of their retirement savings would be placed in a defined benefit plan and 5% would go to a defined contribution plan, similar to a traditional 401K. The legislation also eliminates the Special Legislative Retirement Program, or SLRP, for legislators elected after March 1, 2026.
Decimals aside, there are a lot of needed reforms in this legislation that also accomplish the original intent of reducing and eventually eliminating the income tax. To be sure, the decimal placement matters but that can be fixed without throwing the proverbial baby out with the bath water.

Sid Salter is a syndicated columnist. Contact him at sidsalter@sidsalter.com.

 

24 comments:

Anonymous said...

I don't care what they say; PERS is headed for a reckoning.

Anonymous said...

Start charging those who ride bicycles a road tax. They have been gifted special lanes in the last few years to ride upon. I dont recall anybody voting them this perk.

Anonymous said...

Thank you Mississippi legislature for once again enhancing the reputation of our state. Dumbest legislature in the country.

Anonymous said...

Where did the money come from for pickleball courts?

Anonymous said...

The legislation also eliminates the Special Legislative Retirement Program, or SLRP, for legislators elected after March 1, 2026.

Hoorah!

Anonymous said...

Can we declare bankruptcy and start over? Maybe Mexico will take us? We still owe the feds $100 million for Phil Bryant’s novel use of welfare funds. The federal government appears to be dissolving before our eyes so our only real flow of money is gone. Our sales and property taxes are going to skyrocket to make up for all the lost revenue from income taxes. We have no real industry or prospects for future industry. We are watching a dumpster fire in slow motion.

Anonymous said...

It seems to me this gas tax is going to hit working people particularly hard. Many people who live in the rural areas drive more than 60 miles one way to work. For example nurses that drive in to metro hospitals, manufacturing workers who commute to Nissan and other facilities in DeSoto county and northeast Mississippi.

We can’t all afford to do as the legislators do and purchase second homes, or even rent second homes in Madison to put their kids in private schools, all under the guise of needing to be in Jackson for committee work.

Some of these guys may need to move back home and see what the working people in their districts are truly dealing with. But I am not a tax lawyer or even a country lawyer so what do I know.

Anonymous said...

got a great idea-lets use taxes for intended purposes. road and fuel taxes for roads and bridges. and quit taxing my house. its existence should not create a taxable event

Anonymous said...

I agre

Anonymous said...

@9:09 Thats just boomers screwing over the younger generations AGAIN! Because they will still get theirs FOR LIFE!

Anonymous said...

“ The legislation also eliminates the Special Legislative Retirement Program, or SLRP, for legislators elected after March 1, 2026.”

We got ours, just pulling up the ladder behind us. Y’all can pull yourself up by your bootstraps you lazy bums.

Wow said...

Honestly when I read this, I think wow, at the State level, we are better at compromise than I sometimes give us credit for. Tough decisions need to be made in this fiscal dominance environment. This shows we are trying.

Anonymous said...

We are watching a dumpster fire in slow motion.

And yet you are still here. Let me guess, you rode Worldcom all the way to the bottom.

Anonymous said...

Shuffling taxes around is not a tax cut. Please do not tell me that our politicians actually think lowering one tax and raising another is cutting taxes. We need to elect new politicians. Some that will work instead of looking to fool the people.

Anonymous said...

The state sales tax, where it applies, is currently 7%. It’s flat and is the same for everybody (excluding local option adds for tourism and such). But it’s regressive and disadvantages the poor. The current state fuel tax is flat at 18.4 cents per gallon, and will increase by 9 cents to 27.4 cents per gallon. It’s also a flat tax but is good, not regressive, and should be increased, according to Sid. I’m not arguing the merits either way, but how is a flat sales tax regressive and bad, but a flat fuel tax good and worthy of an increase? What am I missing about this logic?

Anonymous said...

@9:47 AM
At least we "boomers" could and did pay our state income tax . Whatever the whiney younger generations are called enabled Tate to pull this stupid move that will (100% guaranteed) blow up in our faces in a few years.

Anonymous said...

What typos? What "decimal placement"? What the hell are you talking about, Sid?

Anonymous said...

I heard they may let Josh Harkins join the group chat due to his exemplary work in the legislature.

Anonymous said...

Unless I am overlooking something, only the sales tax on groceries is being lowered to 5%. It appears the sales tax on all other categories will still be 7%. Does anyone know if this is correct, or did they state it poorly and the sales tax will be 5% on everything?

Anonymous said...

March 26, 2025 at 9:47 AM, you need to get your lazy ass up and go make it like we did. But, knowing your kind you're probably living in mama's basement waiting on your inheritance. Lazy clown.

Anonymous said...

@1:35 PM You are projecting too hard. The discussion is about the boomers in the legislature voting themselves a retirement plan and then excluding a later generation from accessing the same plan. Go take your pills and have a nap, grandpa.

PS I wish I had a basement.

Anonymous said...

Don't have time to explain it to y'all but I guarantee that elimination of the income tax will lead to a big population migration from western TN to north MS. Because it is already happening even with a state income tax.

Anonymous said...

Cut all spending. No police. No parks. No museums. Fire all government workers. Close mdot. Close hospitals. Shut it all down.

Anonymous said...

If they're every going to save PERS, that's the plan....and don't think they won't do it.



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If you get tired come relax at the Fox News Tent. To gain admittance to the VIP section, bring either your Republican Party ID card or a Rebel Flag. Bringing both will entitle you to free drinks.Get your tickets now. Since this is an event for trolls, no ID is required, just bring the hate. Bring the family, Trollfest '07 is for EVERYONE!!!

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