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Opinion
The following is presented as part of The Columbian’s Opinion content, which offers a point of view in order to provoke thought and debate of civic issues. Opinions represent the viewpoint of the author. Unsigned editorials represent the consensus opinion of The Columbian’s editorial board, which operates independently of the news department.
News / Opinion / Columns

Westneat: Washington no longer worst in taxation

By Danny Westneat
Published: January 29, 2024, 6:01am

It took nearly 30 years, a few political sea changes, an outbreak of socialistic fervor and some backlash to Big Tech’s “prosperity bomb.” But Washington is No. 1 for taxing the poor no more.

Our long, paradoxical reign as the place that goes easiest on the rich, at the expense of the poor, is over.

“We are over here celebrating,” said one activist group that has pushed at this boulder since 2006, the Washington State Budget and Policy Center. “Washington no longer has the nation’s worst tax code.”

You’ve likely heard a mention, or thousands, about this in local politics over the years. The notion that Washington’s tax system is uniquely “upside-down,” because it hits the poor much harder than the wealthy, goes back at least to the 1960s, when then- Gov. Dan Evans, a Republican, tried to implement a state income tax.

I’ve heard the phrase “most regressive taxes in the nation” almost every year of my working life as a journalist here. And that harks back to another millennium.

It really got spotlighted starting in 1996. A Washington, D.C., analyst group called the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy put out a ranking of taxes in the 50 states called “Who Pays?” It looked at who’s paying local and state taxes by income level. And man, was it embarrassing for Washington’s progressive self-image.

“The state of Washington is the highest-tax state in the entire country for poor people,” that report read. “In fact, when all state and local sales, excise and property taxes are tallied up, poor families in the State of Washington pay 17.1 percent of their total income in taxes.”

Our richest families, meanwhile, paid only 3.6 percent. It was as if Washington’s tax system had been designed by Dr. Evil, with the families struggling the most being hit with nearly five times the effective tax rate as the wealthiest.

During the next 20 years, the gaps only grew. The D.C. tax group put out five more editions of its “Who Pays?” report, and each one tapped Washington as America’s worst. They said it’s because our state has no income tax, relies heavily on sales taxes and has some of the highest taxes on products like beer, liquor, cigarettes and gasoline in the country.

By the height of Amazon’s prosperity explosion, in the mid-2010s, the poorest workers here were paying seven times the effective rate in local taxes as the wealthiest 1 percent.

According to the seventh edition of the “Who Pays?” report, out this month, it all led to changes that have prompted Florida to dethrone Washington as the most unequal tax state in America. Our poorest earners dropped to paying 3.4 times the rate as the top earners. That’s still regressive, but lower now than Florida’s 4.9 times.

The report credits three shifts: the passage in Seattle in 2020 of a progressive payroll tax on high earners (aka the Amazon Tax); the new state capital gains tax on stock profits; and the new state Working Families Tax Credit.

It’s remarkable the Sisyphean struggle it took, even in a blue state, to make these modest shifts away from a clearly draconian system.

It’s probably fitting that the struggle’s main foil, that ultimate symbol of tax inequity Jeff Bezos, has decamped to the new top haven of tax regressivity, Florida. In the end, Bezos got his use out of our state. And the tax-the-rich movement sure made use of him.

We’re still the fourth-worst state for the poor. Lawmakers ought to couple their ardor for taxing wealth with more effort toward reducing fees and levies that hit working people.

The money, as it does, is fighting back. A $7 million campaign from wealthy anti-taxers has placed initiatives on the fall ballot to repeal the capital gains tax and to bar any future state or local income taxes.

So we’re no longer No. 1. But the struggle continues. I was looking forward, after nearly 30 years, to hearing no more talking points about us being America’s most regressive place. It looks like that’ll have to wait awhile more.

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