Additionally, the state’s already poor corporate income tax ranking would decline from 39th to 42nd under the proposed progressive tax structure.
The Prairie State’s private sector job growth was less than 1 percent in 2018, ranking it at 46th out of 50 states. Nationwide, labor markets picked up steam throughout 2018, but Illinois lagged in jobs growth. The rest of the nation added private sector jobs at more than double the rate of Illinois.
The state’s weak labor market has been the primary reason for people moving away since 2006, accounting for 57 percent of Illinois’ net migration losses to other states.
As neighboring states continue moving toward more attractive tax rate structures, the push toward a progressive tax in Illinois is also prodding business owners to ponder a move across state lines. “As soon as it increases … there’s no reason to have our corporate headquarters in Illinois,” said Matt Schrimpf, owner of Piasa Motor Fuels LLC, headquartered near Alton, Illinois. “That’s not sustainable. It’s my job, it’s any business owner’s job, to give the company and the employees the best chance of sustainability.”
Despite being marketed as a magic bullet solution, Pritzker’s progressive tax would depress already lackluster job growth and exacerbate the outmigration crisis – without meaningfully helping the state’s finances. The Tax Foundation warns, “If businesses and individuals are leaving the state now, these policies can only make the problem worse.” |