- Oct 9, 1999
- 31,516
- 167
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As per some of the other discussions about the sales tax, I'm curious as to what those of you who are pro sales-tax can do to convince me that a sales-tax for Oregon is the way to go. Right now, Oregon doesn't have a sales tax, and uses income and property taxes to pay for everything, which had lead to a problem with a shortfall of more than $1bil, out of only an $11bil budget.
As a bit of background, Oregon residents have turned down a sales tax more often than you have fingers on your right hand, so it has not been popular up to this point. Oregon is not a huge tourist state(we're more popular than North Dakota, but nothing compared to Cali, Florida, etc), so just about all of the money from the tax would come from the residents themselves. The property tax system is basically locked up tight due to previous measures, so for the sake of argument, any effort to replace one tax with another would be a reduction/replacement of the income tax with the introduction of the sales tax.
Under these conditions, it seems sort of silly to go to a sales tax, as businesses would have to adjust, and the population as a whole, entirely unfamiliar with paying more than list price for something, would have to adjust to the tax. So, here's my challenge to you: I'm on the fence since I'm moving out of state for school anyhow, so please try to convince me(and any other Oregonians reading) that a sales tax is the way to go for our state, as opposed to our current system of income taxes. I'm not expecting to really change my entire opinion here, but I'd like to see something besides the rhetoric that the politicians have been spouting.
PS As an extra challenge, a sales tax might not go over to well with some of our largest employers, such as Intel, who get big tax breaks in the first place
As a bit of background, Oregon residents have turned down a sales tax more often than you have fingers on your right hand, so it has not been popular up to this point. Oregon is not a huge tourist state(we're more popular than North Dakota, but nothing compared to Cali, Florida, etc), so just about all of the money from the tax would come from the residents themselves. The property tax system is basically locked up tight due to previous measures, so for the sake of argument, any effort to replace one tax with another would be a reduction/replacement of the income tax with the introduction of the sales tax.
Under these conditions, it seems sort of silly to go to a sales tax, as businesses would have to adjust, and the population as a whole, entirely unfamiliar with paying more than list price for something, would have to adjust to the tax. So, here's my challenge to you: I'm on the fence since I'm moving out of state for school anyhow, so please try to convince me(and any other Oregonians reading) that a sales tax is the way to go for our state, as opposed to our current system of income taxes. I'm not expecting to really change my entire opinion here, but I'd like to see something besides the rhetoric that the politicians have been spouting.
PS As an extra challenge, a sales tax might not go over to well with some of our largest employers, such as Intel, who get big tax breaks in the first place
