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Northeast loses 40% of House seats as people flee high-tax states

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Northeast loses 40% of House seats as people flee high-tax states

BY PAUL BEDARD | SEPTEMBER 30, 2014 | 11:21 AM
TOPICS: WASHINGTON SECRETS TAXES HO– USE OF REPRESENTATIVES CONNECTICUT MASSACH– USETTS NEW HAMPSHIRE NEW JERSEY NEW YORK PENNSYLVANIA 

The Northeast, once the nation’s political engine that produced presidents, House speakers and Senate giants including the late Edward M. Kennedy, is losing clout in Washington as citizens flee the high-tax region, according to experts worried about the trend.

The Census Bureau reports that population growth has shifted to the South and the result is that the 11 states that make up the Northeast are being bled dry of representation in Washington.

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Critics blame rising taxes in states such as Massachusetts and Connecticut for limiting population growth in the Northeast to just 15 percent from 1983 to 2013, while the rest of the nation grew more than 41 percent.

The biggest impact comes in the loss of congressional representation.

https://washingtonexaminer.com/northeast-loses-40-of-house-seats-as-people-flee-high-tax-states/article/2554143

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N.J. firm moving to Philly

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ArtChick(the Rocky Steps)  of ArtChick Photography who also moved from North Jersey to Philly 4 years ago

N.J. firm moving to Philly

September 22, 2014    Last updated: Monday, September 22, 2014, 1:32 PM
The Record
The Associated Press

MARLTON, N.J. – A southern New Jersey firm that manages construction projects around the world is planning to move its headquarters to Philadelphia in the latest move in a battle between New Jersey and Pennsylvania for businesses.

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett announced the move of Hill International Inc., on Monday.

He says the company will move 222 jobs to the city over the next three years and has approval for $1.8 million in grants and tax credits

In a statement, Hill President and CEO David Richter says the company was looking to consolidate its operations.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/business/n-j-firm-moving-to-philly-1.1093728#sthash.dOeIGb33.dpuf

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Census data show poverty up, incomes down as NJ economic recovery lags

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Census data show poverty up, incomes down as NJ economic recovery lags

SEPTEMBER 18, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2014, 12:48 AM
BY KATHLEEN LYNN AND DAVE SHEINGOLD
STAFF WRITERS

Despite a growing national economy, New Jersey’s weak job market led to lower incomes and a higher poverty rate in the state last year, the Census Bureau said Wednesday. Bergen and Passaic counties were hit especially hard.

Wide disparities

Households in North Jersey generally lost ground financially in 2013, while those in and around New York City fared better.

Median household incomes:

New Jersey

Bergen County: down 2.7 percent

Passaic County: down 1.7 percent

Hudson County: down 3.9 percent

Morris County: up 3.6 percent

New York

Manhattan: up 6 percent

Brooklyn: up 3.6 percent

Staten Island: down 3.3 percent

Nassau: up 1.7 percent

Westchester County: up 7.4 percent

The recession ended in 2009, but a wide range of census measures showed New Jersey was still feeling its effects in 2013. Food stamp use rose; the homeownership rate dropped. Families were more likely to delay having children or decide against paying private-school tuition.

Although one year’s census figures do not indicate a trend, New Jersey’s numbers have generally been tracking in the same direction since the recession. Offering some hope for a better 2014 in New Jersey, experts say a recent drop in unemployment, as well as a higher minimum wage, could mean that incomes have started to rise, and poverty rates to fall, this year.

But in 2013, median household incomes in New Jersey, adjusted for inflation, dropped by 0.7 percent, to an estimated $70,165, mirroring similar declines in surrounding states. New Jersey incomes, after inflation, have dropped 9 percent since 2000, and 6.8 percent from 2007, right before the recession hit.

Nationally, household incomes were essentially flat last year, at about $52,000.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/census-data-show-poverty-up-incomes-down-as-nj-economic-recovery-lags-1.1090302#sthash.9U1HAsaX.dpuf

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Don’t blame the business people

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parasites and political clowns in Washington, Trenton

Don’t blame the business people

AUGUST 17, 2014    LAST UPDATED: MONDAY, AUGUST 18, 2014, 12:16 AM
SUBURBAN TRENDS
Print

Don’t blame the business people

Dear Editor:

A recent letter to the Suburban Trends expressed outrage that some business groups take their holdings offshore to avoid U.S. taxes.

The writer shows a complete ignorance of economics and a hostility to private business.

Business and industry flee America because of the anti-free market environment they have to deal with thanks to the politicians and unelected bureaucrats. No business leader in their right mind would want to set up shop where they will be penalized for being productive.

How many Americans know that the income tax, which we’ve been saddled with since 1913, has its origins in Karl Marx’s “Communist Manifesto” of 1848? “Comrade Karl” thought the income tax so important that it’s the number-two item (next to the abolition of private property) in his plan for a socialized all powerful centralized state!

Add in all the other unconstitutional agencies and bureaus like the EPA, FDA, BATF, and many, many more, and it isn’t hard to see why business leaves the United States.

It’s not just the bloated federal government that is to blame. We have tons of state, county, and local laws, taxes, and regulations across the land that stifle business. These petty local tyrants make life miserable for anyone trying to succeed in business development.

My father, retired construction official Gene Richards of West Milford, is a case in point, In 1998 he came out of retirement to serve on West Milford’s Zoning Board of Adjustment. It didn’t last long as he was thrown off for stating that zoning was a form of property rights violation by government. I don’t want to sound paranoid but I honestly think my pro-freedom libertarian activism over the years may have had something to do with it too. Nobody likes independent thinkers who see beyond the phony “Liberal” versus “Conservative” debates on various issues.

If you wish to bemoan America’s slow economic growth and decline, don’t blame business people. Rather focus on the parasites and political clowns in Washington, Trenton, and your local community who always want more “controls” on virtually everything. They are truly a menace! Vote them out ASAP!

Mark Richards,

West Milford

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/politics/don-t-blame-the-business-people-1.1068870 

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Seeking Lower Taxes, Companies Flee the U.S.

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Seeking Lower Taxes, Companies Flee the U.S.
Arthur Laffer / Stephen Moore / @StephenMoore / August 10, 2014

The last several months have seen a wave of American companies merging with foreign companies, a process known as “inverting.” In effect, inversion is the corporate equivalent of a renunciation of American citizenship. By some estimates, about $250 billion of these deals have been consummated since the start of the year, and another $100 billion could be finalized soon.

As inversions have exploded onto the policy scene, Washington is scrambling to find ways to counteract a trend that could deprive the federal treasury of tens of billions of tax dollars, which Washington believes belong to the government. In President Obama’s own words, “My attitude is I don’t care if it’s legal, it’s wrong.”

Inversions vividly illustrate the amazing dysfunctions of the U.S. corporate tax code. The corporate tax raises $250 billion per year, or 1.5% of GDP, which is one of the lowest tax revenues in the world. And, the U.S. has the highest corporate tax rate in the world. If that’s not enough, compliance costs are huge and the corporate tax is a job killer.

An inversion occurs when an American company merges with a smaller company in a lower-tax jurisdiction such as Ireland. The deal is structured so the smaller company acquires the larger American company. Operations and management often remain in the U.S., but the legal headquarters is changed to the lower-tax jurisdiction.

By inverting, the company is no longer legally U.S.-based and thus is not required to pay U.S. taxes on profits earned abroad.

A notable requirement — IRS code 7874 added as part of the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 — is that the shareholders of the smaller target company must end up owning at least 20% of the inverting company’s shares. Obama wants to raise this requirement to 50%.

U.S. Tax System Onerous

The rush to invert is a direct result of the 39.1% U.S. corporate tax rate, including state and local corporate taxes, compared with an average corporate tax rate for the rest of the world of 25%.

U.S. corporate taxes also apply to world profits, not just profits earned in the U.S., which makes an inversion cost-effective for an American company operating abroad. Anyone who is watching these inversions happen and still believes that tax rates don’t matter is living in a parallel universe.

The recent rush to invert is in part because other nations are cutting their corporate tax rates — the U.K., Japan and Spain most recently — making the cost savings much greater for U.S. companies. The other reason companies are rushing to invert now is to preempt discriminatory legislation proposed by the Obama administration.

The chart below encapsulates the problem. The U.S. was once a low corporate-tax rate nation; now we are the highest. The 39.1% U.S. rate has been effectively unchanged for 20 years, but the rest of the world has been slashing rates. This is a phenomenon we have called “supply-side economics goes global.”

We have also talked to CEOs who say they can negotiate sweetheart tax deals to bring their corporate tax rate below 10% and sometimes down to zero.

Blame Everyone Else

The administration’s response is simple: Blame everyone else for the dysfunctional tax code and then outlaw inversions retroactively. Because most inversions involve foreign minnows swallowing U.S. whales, a 50% foreign-ownership requirement, if made retroactive to May 2014, would make most of the mergers that have already taken place illegal and very expensive.

We believe the Obama proposal is pure demagoguery and would encourage multinational companies to avoid the U.S. altogether, meaning even fewer U.S. jobs. The Obama plan is like seeing a raging fire in a building and locking all the doors shut so no one can get out.

After the midterm elections, Congress and the White House could strike a bipartisan deal to slow down the inversion process, including some corporate-tax-rate reduction. A corporate tax rate of 28% could be “paid for” in part by closing corporate “loopholes” such as the wind tax credit and other energy subsidies.

Democrats will insist on repealing tax deferral on foreign-held profits. But even so, if the U.S. corporate tax rate is lowered enough, deferral will be less advantageous, and such a trade-off may be worthwhile.

In the longer term, Paul Ryan’s tax plan includes a swap of a value-added tax for a corporate profits tax. The Ryan plan is consistent with the Laffer Complete Flat Tax proposal. Because value added is essentially GDP and corporate tax revenues are between 1.5% and 2% of GDP, a full corporate tax switch from a tax base of profits to value-added would imply a corporate value-added tax rate in the low single digits.

We would put the odds of a partial corporate tax holiday on repatriated profits at 50-50. Companies with profits stored overseas could repatriate their earnings back to the U.S. at a lower tax rate. A tax holiday with a temporary tax rate of 5% to 10% could bring back to the U.S. as much as $1 trillion to $2 trillion parked overseas, raising as much as $50 billion for the Treasury.

Our view is simply that government doesn’t need more money; government needs to spend less. Thus, this $50 billion of additional taxes should be offset by permanent corporate-tax rate-reduction, dollar for dollar.

Tax On U.S. Jobs, Wages

We have always believed that the case for tax reform will catch on politically when American workers and unions start to see that this isn’t just a tax on corporate shareholders but on domestic workers as well.

The U.S. corporate tax sends jobs abroad by encouraging outsourcing, and it also lowers wages in the U.S. Kevin Hassett at the American Enterprise Institute finds that “corporate tax rates affect wage levels across countries. Higher corporate taxes lead to lower wages.”

Somebody please tell this to the Teamsters’ James Hoffa.

Another proposal would be to have the U.S. join other countries and move to a territorial tax system. American companies would simply pay the tax in the country in which their plant or facility is located. Republicans are skittish about this idea, worrying it would only further the incentive for businesses to move plants and jobs offshore.

Top Dems Urge Reform

The U.S. corporate tax is on the verge of complete collapse. Former Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker have advised Obama that the current corporate tax is an economic loser.

“The U.S. corporate tax incentivizes American businesses to move jobs offshore,” according to Volcker. “Unless the rate is cut substantially, this trend will continue and American workers will pay the price.”

Adds Geithner: “I do think there’s an overwhelmingly compelling case for broad-based corporate tax reform. The basic imperative is to get the incentives better and the fundamentals better for people creating and building things in the United States.”

We agree!

Originally posted on Investor’s Business Daily.

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US companies look to flee high US taxes

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US companies look to flee high US taxes 

JULY 20, 2014    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014, 1:21 AM
BY TOM MURPHY
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
THE RECORD

* Some lawmakers fear the deals, called inversions, will seriously reduce tax revenue

A growing number of U.S. companies are looking to trim their tax bills by combining operations with foreign businesses in a trend that may eventually cost the federal government billions of dollars in revenue.

Generic drug maker Mylan Inc. said last week that it will become part of a new company organized in the Netherlands in a $5.3 billion deal to acquire some of Abbott Laboratories’ generic-drug business. The deal is expected to lower Mylan’s tax rate to about 20 percent in the first full year and to the high teens after that.

The Canonsburg, Pa., company’s deal follows a path explored by several other U.S. drug makers in recent months. AbbVie Inc. has entered talks with Shire Plc. over a $53.68 billion deal that would lead to a lower tax rate and a company organized on the British island of Jersey.

But drug makers aren’t the only companies looking overseas for better tax deals.

Last month, U.S. medical device maker Medtronic Inc. said that it had agreed to buy Ireland-based competitor Covidien for $42.9 billion in cash and stock. The combined company would have executive offices in Ireland, which has a 12.5 percent corporate income tax rate. And drugstore chain Walgreen Co. — which bills itself as “America’s premier pharmacy” — also is considering a similar move with Swiss health and beauty retailer Alliance Boots.

These tax-lowering overseas deals, which are called inversions, have raised concerns among some U.S. lawmakers over the potential for lost tax revenue. But business experts say U.S. companies that find the right deal have to consider inversions due to the heavy tax burden they face back home.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/business/overseas-acquisitions-help-u-s-companies-cut-taxes-1.1054237#sthash.GaDTjvkx.dpuf

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Garden State in dismal state

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file photo Boyd Loving

Garden State in dismal state
GREG DAVID 
JULY 6, 2014 12:01 A.M.

Chris Christie certainly has his troubles these days. A decline in tax revenue left him with a big hole in the budget for the just-ended fiscal year, which he closed by not making a big payment to the state’s beleaguered pension fund. His transportation-improvement fund is depleted, forcing him into maneuvers to grab Port Authority money to fix the Pulaski Skyway.

The list could go on, but the cause of all these woes is the same: a very poor economy. It’s why the governor doesn’t talk about the New Jersey miracle anymore.

The best way to compare economies these days is by their performance during the long and mostly painful recovery from the Great Recession. That’s what I have done for New Jersey, New York state and New York City in the chart accompanying this column. (The story would be the same if I compared Mr. Christie’s state with the country as a whole.)

 New JerseyNew YorkNew York City
Jobs lost in recession257,900330,200140,800
As percentage of all jobs6.3%3.7%3.7%
Jobs regained100,300524,600374,900
Percentage of lost jobs regained39%159%266%
Jobless rate peak9.7%8.9%10.0%
Jobless rate now6.8%6.7%7.9%
GDP 2010$493.2 billion$1,182.9 billion$509.1 billion
GDP in 2013$509.1 billion$1,226.7 billion$626.1 billion
Gain in GDP3.2%3.7%7.0%
Personal income growth14.2%15.3%12.7%
Change in home price from peak-20.1%0.0%Not available

Jobs and unemployment numbers are from peak month to lowest month to May and are seasonally adjusted. State jobs and unemployment numbers are from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. New York City jobs numbers are from independent economist Barbara Byrne Denham; unemployment rates from state Labor Department regional data. State GDP and personal income numbers are from Bureau of Economic Analysis. NYC GDP from city comptroller’s office. City personal income numbers from Office of Management and Budget February financial plan. Housing index from Corelogic from peak prices to April.

It isn’t a pretty picture. New Jersey has regained only a little more than a third of the jobs lost in the recession, and its GDP and personal-income growth is subpar. Housing prices are a particular problem. Only the decline in unemployment is a positive sign.

https://www.crainsnewyork.com/article/20140706/BLOGS01/140709942/garden-state-in-dismal-state#

 

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N.J. Democrats to push for paid sick time

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N.J. Democrats to push for paid sick time

TRENTON – New Jersey Democrats and labor activists are pushing to require private employers to provide paid leave for workers who are sick or who need to attend to loved ones with an illness. About 38 percent of the state’s private-sector workforce, or 1.2 million employees, do not have access to earned sick leave, according to a 2013 study by the Rutgers Center for Women and Work. (Seidman/The Philadelphia Inquirer)

https://www.philly.com/philly/news/local/20140616_N_J__Democrats_to_push_for_paid_sick_time.html