State Rep. Fitz Steele, a Hazard Democrat, is hoping to convince legislators in 2010 that Kentucky should join a growing number of states that have enacted laws creating sales tax holidays. However, while creating a temporary tax break for consumers, studies of sales tax holidays in other states have found them to have only a minimal impact on retail sales while actually increasing the burden on retail businesses by forcing them to temporarily adjust cash registers to not add the sales tax on exempted items.
Steele is proposing a three-day tax holiday just before the start of the school year in early August. As proposed, it would run from the first Friday in August through Sunday. The sales tax would be removed from such items as clothes, computers and school supplies, but it would remain on items not related to school.
At least 19 states have approved bills establishing sales tax holidays, and 10 states tie the holidays to the start of the school year.
However, among the opponents of sales tax holidays is the privately-funded Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, an organization that calls the sales tax the most unfair levy imposed by states. While the Institute supports eliminating the sales tax, it also recognizes that the tax is a major source of revenue in most states, including Kentucky.
However, the Institute says sales tax holidays “create administrative difficulties for state governments and for the retailers who must collect the tax.” The Institute rightly recognizes that creating a temporary sales tax exemption on clothing and school supplies “requires retailers and tax administrators to wade through a similar quantity of red tape for an exemption that last only a few days.”
While advocates of the sales tax holidays contend that the exemptions are to help the poor purchase their children’s clothes and supplies for schools, we suspect the middle and upper classes benefit from the sales tax holiday more than the poor. While the poor certainly have to buy paper, pencils and other school supplies, most lower income children do not purchase new clothes for school. Instead, they wear what they already own to school.
Sales tax holidays may be good politics because they offer a small break from taxes, but the holidays are poor tax policy — particularly at a time when Kentucky and most other states are struggling to generate enough revenue to meet essential services. That makes this the wrong time for Kentucky to temporarily cut taxes in a way that has not proved effective in other states.
Editorials
Of litte value — 09/26/09
Sales tax holidays are good politics but not good policy
- Editorials
-
-
Charles Chattin
Before it merged with Ashland Community College to form Ashland Community and Technical College as a result of the 1997 Higher Education Reform Act, the Ashland Area Vocational-Technical School compiled an impressive record for teaching job skills to young adults and placing more than 85 percent in jobs for which they were trained.
-
Try again
It is time for Kentucky Speaker of the House Greg Stumbo, D-Prestonsburg, and Senate President David Williams, R-Burkesville, to cease playing political games and redraw district lines that are compact and are based far more on population changes during the first decade of this century than on partisan politics.
-
'Asset poor'
More than one in four Kentucky households are “asset poor,” meaning that they are living from paycheck to paycheck with little or no financial cushion to fall back on should they suddenly lose their jobs or have another emergency resulting in a temporary loss of or delcine in income.
-
Safer mines
The head of the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) says coal operators throughout the country are improving their operations and, as a result, mines are becoming safer. However, MSHA chief Joe Main said too many coal operators still “don’t get it” and are continuing to cut costs by ignoring safety. That’s why MSHA plans to continue targeting mines with a history of repeated violations for additional inspections.
-
Not far enough
For the past three sessions of the Kentucky General Assembly, bills that would raise the minimum dropout age from 16 to 18 have been approved by the Kentucky House of Representatives by wide bipartisan margins only to die in the Senate without even a vote.
Now the Senate Education Committee has unanimously approved a dropout bill hailed as an alternative to the House bill, but it does not go nearly far enough. It is a halfway measure that would have only a limited effect on preventing teenagers from quitting high school before graduation and virtually assuring themselves of lives on the lowest rungs of the economic ladder.
-
Not their job
The local government committee of the Kentucky House of Representatives has wisely killed a bill — dubbed “Cooper’s Law” — that would have allowed the family of the Lexington toddler with cerebral palsy to have a playhouse on their property despite a deed restriction that apparently prohibits such structures.
-
Keeping FADE
Despite an increase in cost to the department, Carter County Sheriff Casey Brammell told the Carter County Fiscal Court that his department will continue to be active in the FIVCO Area Development Drug Enforcement (FADE) Task Force — at least for now.
-
Needed changes
The soaring enrollment that Kentucky’s community and technical colleges have experienced in recent years could come to a sudden end — or at least be slowed — as about 5,500 students in the statewide system that includes Ashalnd Community and Technical College are expected to lose their financial aid under new rules being implemented by the federal government.
-
Released early
While it is disappointing that 75 of the 952 prisoners granted early release in January have violated the terms of their releases, the good news is that none of the former inmates have been charged with new felonies. That’s an early, but positive, indication that the nonviolent felons released before their sentences were up have been carefully selected and are among those least likely to return to a life of crime.
-
Obese children
Almost a decade after former Gov. Ernie Fletcher called childhood obesity an “epidemic” in Kentucky, a majority of Kentucky adults still think that there are too many overweight children in the state and they place the bulk of the blame squarely on the shoulders of their parents.
- More Editorials Headlines
-
Charles Chattin








