One of the more interesting bills still alive and being considered in the Legislature this session is聽one that would commission a study on the effects of Hawaii鈥檚 low real property taxes.

Excuse me? Low taxes are a concern?

attempts to explain why in its preamble section:聽鈥淭he legislature finds that Hawaii has the lowest property taxes in the聽nation. Although this makes sense for low- and middle-income residents who聽own an average single-family home, this causes the counties to potentially forego聽additional tax revenue from high-value homes and second homes.

鈥淭he legislature further finds that many individuals and families who spend聽time in Hawaii are owners of high-value properties and do not pay state income聽tax, instead maintaining resident status in another state with a lower income tax聽rate. However, these individuals still use Hawaii’s infrastructure and services,聽and thus should pay their fair share.

鈥淭he legislature also finds that low property taxes can incentivize聽development of high-end, high-value properties, contributing to the high cost of聽land in Hawaii, driving up the cost of living and exacerbating our affordable聽housing and homelessness issues.鈥

The conventional wisdom as to why Hawaii has low real property taxes is that聽most other states provide schools at the city or county level, requiring them to be funded聽by a municipal funding source like a property tax. Hawaii has a state-run school聽system, which is funded by state funding sources like the income tax and the general excise tax.

The bill bemoans the low property taxes and portrays the counties as suffering聽because they are forgoing tax revenue. But the counties set property tax rates by聽ordinance and look at rate levels during every budget cycle.

Honolulu and Kauai, for聽example, enacted major changes to their property tax systems in 2013. If the counties聽are forgoing revenue, they are doing it by their own choice.

The bill casts aspersions on nonresidents, asserting they don鈥檛 pay their fair聽share in income tax. Our income tax, however, is like the tax systems in most other聽states. Nonresidents get taxed on income with its source in Hawaii.

Residents get聽taxed on income regardless of source but聽get a credit for tax paid to another state or聽country on income that has its source in that state or country. So a taxpayer鈥檚 tax,聽resident or not, depends on where the income comes from and whether other聽jurisdictions are also taxing it. If that system fails to tax people fairly, why do most聽states with an income tax use it?

The bill also asserts that low property taxes lead to development of high-end聽properties that then drive up the cost of land and therefore the cost of living. So the聽remedy for this is higher taxes, which can and do drive up the cost of living by聽themselves?

Come on, folks. Land costs more because we鈥檙e on an island in paradise.聽Folks are willing to pay decent money to live here part of the time even if they might not聽want to live here permanently. Indeed, our tourism authority actively encourages聽potential tourists to come here.

So property is going to cost more here than the same聽square footage in places where transient rental is less of a factor.

Perhaps a more logical explanation for the debate here is contained in the聽testimony of the Hawaii State Teachers Association in support of the bill:

鈥淎ll options for generating聽revenue must be on (the) table, in our view, including the possibility of hiking or聽imposing a surcharge on property taxes to strengthen our children鈥檚 future.鈥

We look forward to continuing the conversation.

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