11/18: Analysis of tax systems in U.S. released
ITEP: Distributional analysis of tax systems in the 50 states
A state-by-state look at how fair each state's tax systems are, considering both state and local taxes paid by different income groups in 2007. The study shows which states have done the best and worst job of providing fairness in their tax systems overall.
One overall conclusion: Nearly every state and local tax system takes more proportionally from middle and low income families than from the wealthy -- "most tax systems are regressive."
Of the eleven Southern states we cover, Tennessee, Florida, and Alabama are among the ten most regressive tax states among the 50.
Also in the South:
ALABAMA: Black Belt's future projected to be in biofuels, some say
ARKANSAS: 2010 governor's race to be impacted by economy
FLORIDA: Top senators say state should drop out of federal Medicaid system
GEORGIA: On population count, South Georgia could lose legislative seats
KENTUCKY: State considers how to repay federal jobless funds loans
LOUISIANA: Poll finds race relations mostly unchanged in last year
MISSISSIPPI: 79 of state's 82 counties declared a disaster by heavy rain, drought
NORTH CAROLINA: Human trafficking seen as a problem in NC due to highways, agriculture
SOUTH CAROLINA: State's onshore winds may not be enough for power generation
TENNESSEE: State parks may cut jobs, close amenities to save money
VIRGINIA: New economic engine for N. VA could come from Ignite Institute
If you have a news story about public policy to suggest, send an email to info@bettersouth.org
Labels: bifuel, economy, jobless, Medicaid, parks, population, race, tax, trafficking, wind


0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home