SB 555: The Last Bill Standing to Give Low-Income People a Tax Credit
Other tax credit proposals are dead for another session, while the push to extend the general excise tax for rail is very much alive.
While Hawaii lawmakers discuss聽聽to help pay for the over-budget Honolulu rail project, there鈥檚 only one bill still alive in the Legislature that would give low-income residents a tax break.
would increase the food/excise tax credit, which hasn鈥檛 been changed since it was established in 2007.聽The would have increased the credit to a maximum of $100 for taxpayers聽who make less than $5,800 per year, while tax filers with incomes less than $57,500聽would have been eligible for a $30 credit.
However, the House Finance Committee聽amended the bill by blanking out the dollar amounts of the聽tax exemptions, pending negotiations that are taking place in conference committee this week. The bill聽is scheduled to be heard on Wednesday at 2 p.m.
“This is obviously something that affects all families,” said Sen. Will Espero, who introduced the bill. “We want to pass this bill.”
The Hawaii Appleseed Center contends that because of inflation, the food/excise tax credit should be increased to $96 for households with incomes up to聽$56,500.
Right now, tax filers with a federal adjusted income of聽less than $5,000 per year can receive $85, while those with incomes less than $50,000 can receive $25.
The food/excise聽credit is “incredibly important because it鈥檚 a credit that really applies to a large block of different populations, including individuals who are disabled and seniors that are living on their own,鈥 Scott Morishige, executive director of PHOCUSED, told Civil Beat.
The measure would cost the state $6.5 million starting in fiscal year 2017, according to the Hawaii Department of Taxation鈥檚 testimony.
“The challenge now at this stage is all about fitting it in …聽the budget,” Espero said.聽
SB 555聽is the only bill left that would聽help low-income taxpayers balance out the potential extension of the GET surcharge.
Other Tax Credit Bills Bite the Dust
For yet another year,聽most聽of the bills聽to give low-income residents tax relief聽died. Among them were a bill that would have increased the聽low-income rental housing tax credit; a bill that would have established 聽an聽; and聽聽that would have reduced or eliminated the state income tax liability for taxpayers with incomes聽less than 125 percent of the federal poverty guidelines.
Last year, a to increase the food/excise tax credit but it died when it wasn鈥檛 scheduled by the House Finance Committee. 聽never made it to the Senate Ways and Means Committee.
Food costs for a Hawaii family of four are 68 percent more than what they are on the mainland, according to the .聽Meanwhile, Hawaii has the highest cost of housing in the nation, with almost three-quarters of extremely low-income people spending more than half of their income on rent, according to the .
As rents have聽skyrocketed, the state rental housing tax credit has been stuck at $50 per dependent for nearly 35 years. Several bills that would have increased the rental housing tax credit died in the House and Senate this session.
Jenny Lee, an attorney with Hawaii Appleseed Center, said Hawaii’s low-income residents don鈥檛 only suffer from the high cost of living 鈥 they’re faced with the burden of Hawaii鈥檚 regressive tax system.
According to the , Hawaii has the 15th most unfair state and local tax system in the country. The bottom 20 percent of households in Hawaii pay over 13 percent of their income in state and local taxes, while the top 1 percent pays around 8 percent, according to the ITEP report.
Lee blames that on the general excise tax.
Because the GET applies to nearly all goods and services, the tax burden falls most heavily on low-income households that must spend a larger share of their income on basic necessities, she said.
鈥淲e鈥檙e taxing people deeper into poverty,鈥 Lee said.
Espero said that the ideal situation would be to remove the GET from food altogether.
However, the GET is the largest source of revenue for the state, generating approximately half of the state鈥檚 income, according to the Federation of Tax Administrators.
‘A Lot of Resistance’
Lee and Morishige said that increasing tax credits could help Hawaii develop a more progressive approach to taxes.
鈥(Tax credits) really (have) a big impact on the the community and speak to income inequality,鈥 said Morishige. 鈥淚 think that one possible outcome is that it would encourage people in the community to file their taxes.鈥
But so far, legislators have been hesitant to increase tax credits or add new ones for people in poverty, Lee said.
鈥淭here is a lot of resistance and serious vetting of any kind of new credit,鈥 Lee said.
For one, tax credits carry a high price tag for state revenue. The state spent $4.3 million on the low-income rental housing credit for more than 41,000 taxpayers in 2012, which is聽latest year for which data is available.
Espero said that any bill聽that deals聽with taxpayers’ dollars is highly scrutinized. The food/excise tax credit for low-income taxpayers is predominantly supported by聽lawmakers, but whether or not the bill will pass the Legislature depends on perspectives of the chairs in conference committee and the funding left in the budget, Espero said.
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