In the South and West, a Tax on Being Poor
Zuccotti Park Press @zuccottipress
Taxing the Poor http://nyti.ms/ZAd5xM
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/09/in-the-south-and-west-a-tax-on-being-poor/?smid=tw-share
That social compact shifted into high gear during the Nixon administration, which tried to incentivize work by rewarding low-income households with a tax break that became the nations most successful antipoverty tool ever: the earned-income tax credit. Politicians of both parties have embraced the credit, making it more progressive three times since it was enacted in 1975.
While the federal government has largely stuck by the principle of progressive taxation, the states have gone their own ways: tax policy is particularly regressive in the South and West, and more progressive in the Northeast and Midwest. When it comes to state and local taxation, we are not one nation under God. In 2008, the difference between a working mother in Mississippi and one in Vermont each with two dependent children, poverty-level wages and identical spending patterns was $2,300.
These regional disparities go back to Reconstruction, when Southern Republicans increased property taxes on defeated white landowners and former slaveholders to pay for the first public services education, hospitals, roads ever provided to black citizens. After Reconstruction ended in 1877, conservative Democrats popularly labeled the Redeemers rolled taxes back to their prewar levels and inserted supermajority clauses into state constitutions to ensure it could never happen again. Property taxes were frozen; income taxes were held down; corporate taxes were almost nonexistent.
Practically the only tax that could rise was the one that hurt the poor the most: the sales tax. And rise it did, throughout the Deep South in the late 19th century, then spreading into the Carolinas, Georgia, Florida and the rest of the region in the 1960s and 1970s. Even liberal politicians werent able to buck the tide just ask Bill Clinton, who as governor of Arkansas urgently sought new revenue to improve his states ailing schools and found the sales tax was the only politically viable option.
(More at the link.)