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- Public employees: essential to
government
- A. Merit systems
- 1. Almost all states use the
merit system to choose their public servants, rather than patronage
- 2. Merit systems are administered
by a state personnel office that handles exams, provides lists of job
openings, establishes job classifications, and determines salary
schedules
- 3. Merit systems should emphasize
ability and minimize political favoritism, but they may discourage able
people from seeking public-sector jobs and they can deprive officials of authority over
subordinates
- 4. The Hatch Act promoted the merit principle.
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- 1. These unions have grown rapidly over the past generation and now
wield considerable political clout
- 2. The success of public-employee
unions is the result of government workers learning how to become a
political force within cities and states
- 3. Public-employee unions
influence crucial decisions that affect taxation and the allocation of
revenue; some believe these two factors may lead to unfair influence,
resulting in a redistribution of income in favor of public employees
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- 1. Problem: mayors have a responsibility to all
voters and are also elected with union member votes (and so are
employees of their own employees)
- 2. Bargaining with unions is
affected by the monopolistic, vital nature of many public services,
great publicity, and the need for legislative approval
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- 1. Many communities have
“contracted out” some public services to private companies that can
provide the services at lower costs and still make a profit; today
virtually every service is contracted out, a trend expected to continue
- 2. Some problems to privatization:
liability concerns, individual rights questions, and difficulty
in defining some public services such as police
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- A. State and local governments are the fiscal “stress points” of
American government
- 1. Voters involved through
referenda on new or higher taxes
- 2. Federal government mandates
force state and local governments to meet responsibilities
- 3. Voters have high expectations
for services
- 4. Constitutional prohibitions on
deficit spending in the states force balanced budgets
- 5. Tax policies are not
coordinated across governments
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- 1. Who bears the cost of state and local services is decided in the
United States by politics
- 2. The Constitution has been interpreted to forbid states:
- a. To tax exports or imports or to levy tonnage duties with the consent
of Congress
- b. To use their taxing power to interfere with federal operations
- c. To discriminate against interstate commerce, unduly burden it, or
directly tax it
- d. To use their taxing power to deprive persons of equal protection of
the law
- e. To deprive individuals of their property without due process
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- 3. States may collect sales taxes from interstate sales and income taxes
from persons and corporations within the states, even if the income was
earned from interstate business
- 4. State constitutions also restrict state taxing power
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- 1. Even though very unpopular,
the property tax is a major revenue source for local governments, but
- there is great variation from place to place in dependence on it
- 2. Administration of the property
tax
- a. It is difficult to administer, often inequitable, and not based on
ability to pay
- b. Many communities stipulate that the general property tax be imposed
on all property, but more a significant percent of real property in
cities is exempt because of ownership by tax-exempt groups
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- c. The general property tax is typically administered by an assessor,
who attempts to place a value on property - an assessment
- d. The lump-sum payment aspect of the property tax is one reason for its
widespread unpopularity;
- 3. Property taxes and public education
- a. The amount of money available
to finance education varies tremendously from area to area, as property
values differ
- b. Reformers have urged states to
take over the financing of public education, or at least to assume a
greater share of the burden, in order to equalize differences from
community to community
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- c. Several state courts have
ruled that wide differences between school districts in per pupil
expenditures are inconsistent with the equal protection clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment and of state constitutions
- d. However, in 1973 the Supreme
Court held that there is no federal constitutional requirement that the
amount spent per pupil in each school district must be the same
- e. One effort to reform the
general property tax is the circuit-breaker exemption, giving a form of
tax relief to lower-income families and the elderly
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- a. Passage of California’s Proposition 13 set a 1 percent limit for
taxes on a property’s market value
based on its 1975-76 assessment and limited increases to a
maximum of 2 percent a year
- b. Proposition 13 elevated tax reduction to an important issue
nationwide, triggering tax and
spending limits in more than a dozen states and spurring movements for
constitutional amendments to set federal spending limits, to require a
balanced federal budget, and to index income tax brackets
- c. The most important consequence of Proposition 13 was that it
gave rise to a new conventional
wisdom that the public had become more conservative and desired
less government
- d. Another consequence is that local governments have decreased
their dependence on the property tax and developed other sources of
revenue
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- 1. Sales taxes
- a. The sales tax is the most important source of
revenue for states
- b. The sales tax is easy to administer and produces
large amounts of revenue
- c. As we move from a manufacturing to a service economy, states continue
to search for ways to tax services
- d. The federal government is considering a value-added tax (VAT), which
might reduce state and local ability to use the sales tax
- e. Tax revenues from mail-order catalog businesses and internet sales
are controversial
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- a. Personal income taxes are generally progressive
income taxes, graduated so that the rate goes up with the size of the
income
- b. State income tax rates, however, do not rise as
sharply as the federal income tax and seldom go above 10 percent
- c. States generally do not allow local governments to levy income taxes;
however, some cities collect a payroll or wage tax
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- a. Almost all states tax gasoline, alcohol, and
cigarettes, known as excise taxes
- b. These are justified as taxes because they can
reduce consumption of those items
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- 4. Severance taxes are taxes on the privilege of “severing” such natural
resources as coal, oil, timber, and gas from the land; in recent years
the severance tax accounted for more than 20 percent of tax collections
in eight states
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- 1. Lotteries
- a. Lotteries are state-sponsored and
state-administered gambling used to raise money for public purposes
- b. Many states earmark lottery funds for special
services (education, senior citizens)
- c. Elected officials like lotteries because they raise
revenue without raising taxes
- d. Because they take money from many people and return
it to only a few, many economists say lotteries are an inequitable form
of tax
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- a. A casino is expected to be within a four-hour drive for 95 percent of
all Americans
- b. Indian tribes asserted their right to self-rule on reservations and
brought casinos to many states and gambling companies promoted gambling
on river boats and dockside casinos
- c. Critics of gambling assert that lotteries and some other forms of
legalized gambling have not produced as much revenue as promised and see
negative social consequences flowing from expanded gambling
opportunities
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- a. State and local collection of user charges - fees paid directly by
individuals to use certain public services - has grown rapidly in recent
years
- b. Examples of services that users pay fees for are toll roads, higher
education, hospitals, airports, parks, sewage, and solid waste
management
- 4. Grants
- a. Grants from states to local
governments have become increasingly important during the last several
decades as federal grants have declined
- b. Local governments
receive state and federal grants in a wide range of areas
- c. One reason
local governments receive so much money in the form of grants is that
they are the unit of government closest to the people and most
experienced at providing services
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- 1. To fund long-term projects,
called capital expenditures, cities and states often have to borrow
money
- 2. Long-term borrowing by states
and cities is necessary for projects whose costs are so large that it is
not feasible to pay for them out of current revenue; for this purpose,
governments issue bonds, often with voter approval, such as serial bonds
- 3. The National Tax Reform Act of
1986 restricted the ability of states and localities to issue tax-exempt
debt, and the power to borrow money for the long-term now routinely
requires voter approval
- 4. State and local bonds are
attractive to well-to-do investors because the interest is exempt from
federal income tax
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- 1. State and local governments try to enhance their own economies by
courting business and economic growth
- 2. They use tax incentives to
lower tax rates to businesses
- 3. New businesses, such as
shopping malls, will raise the tax base and may be lower the tax burden
for residents
- 4. Developers play governments
against one another to lower tax burdens
- 5. Sports teams have especially
sought “sweetheart deals” to stay in a particular city
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