Over the past decade, the state tax landscape has grown increasingly competitive as policymakers have sought to attract investment and promote economic opportunity and growth in their states. The past two years in particular have seen an extraordinary increase in tax reform efforts, given statesââŻstrong revenue growth despite the pandemicâŻand policymakersâ desire to make their states more attractive to anâŻincreasingly mobile workforce.
Most of the focus of these reform efforts has been onâŻreducing state income tax rates, as corporate and individual income taxes areâŻwidely regarded by economistsâŻas more economically harmful than taxes on consumption and real property. Furthermore, states with low or no income taxes have seenâŻsignificantly strongerâŻgross state product growth and net inbound migration over the past decade than their higher income tax peers, and high-tax states are increasingly taking notice.
Thatâs why, in Wisconsin, comprehensive tax reform that prioritizesâŻgross state product growthâŻandâŻpersonal income growthâŻought to be a top priority for policymakers, especially given the recent reforms made by many of Wisconsinâs regional and national peers.
In 2021, Wisconsin was one of 13 states to enact laws permanently reducing individual and/or corporate income tax rates (several additional states implemented previously enacted cuts in 2021 as well). Thus far in 2022, eight states have newly enacted laws reducing income tax rates, andâŻothers may yet follow.
Many states are not only lowering their top marginal individual income tax rates but are alsoâŻconsolidating bracketsâŻto create a more neutral, pro-growth environment thatâŻavoids penalizingâŻadditional labor and investment on the margin. In the first 109 years of state income taxation, only four states converted their graduated-rate individual income taxes into single-rate structures, but in the past year alone,âŻfour additional statesâArizona, Iowa, Mississippi, and Georgiaâhave enacted laws to move to a single-rate structure.
Increasingly, when it comes to income tax competitiveness, states that stand still risk falling behind and losing residents and business investment to their more tax-friendly peers.
Over the past decade, Wisconsin policymakers have enacted multiple iterations of tax relief, including income andâŻproperty taxâŻrelief under Gov. Scott Walker (R), as well as a series of reductions to the three lowest marginalâŻindividual income taxâŻrates that were passed by the Republican-controlled legislature and agreed to by Gov. Tony Evers (D). While the rate reductions in 2019, 2020, and 2021 are providing meaningful relief to those at the lower end of the income spectrum, recent tax changes have mostly danced around the edges of the tax code and have stopped short of comprehensive tax modernization that will truly promote long-term economic growth.
The only marginal individual income tax rate Wisconsin has left unchanged since 2019 is the one that has the most detrimental impact on labor and investment in the state: the top marginal rate. At 7.65 percent, Wisconsinâs rate is theâŻ10th highestâŻin the nation, lower than that of only eight states and the District of Columbia. While Wisconsin is among theâŻ25 statesâŻthat have lower top individual income tax rates now than in 2012, its competitive standing on income tax rates has fallen nonetheless, fromâŻ11th highestâŻin the nation at 7.75 percent in 2012 toâŻ10th highestâŻin the nation in 2022 at 7.65 percent.
Reductions to the top marginal rate are more likely to promote economic growth than reductions to lower rates because personal and business decisions regarding additional labor and investment, as well as relocation, are made at the marginâthat is, based on how tax rates will affect theâŻnextâŻdollar of income, not income already earned. High marginal rates reduce the payoff to additional work and business investment on the margin, resulting in fewer hours worked, lower workforce participation, and fewer capital investments made by businesses.
Like the individual income tax rate, Wisconsinâs corporate income tax rate has also lost competitive standing over the last decade. At 7.9 percent, Wisconsinâs corporate rate was closer to the middle of the pack a decade ago (theâŻ19th highestâŻin the nation) but is now theâŻ14th highest.
Consider neighboring Iowa, which has taken significant strides to improve its tax competitiveness over the past five years. Once the comprehensive reforms enacted inâŻ2018âŻandâŻ2022âŻare fully phased in, Iowa will have a more neutral tax base with a flat individual income tax rate of 3.9 percent (down from 8.98 percent) and a flat corporate income tax rate of 5.5 percent (down from 12 percent), along with the repeal of its inheritance tax, some sales tax modernization, and other improvements to the tax code. These reforms have put Iowa on track to go from having the fifth-worst-structured tax code before 2018 to theâŻ15th-best-structuredâŻtax code once these reforms are fully phased in.
Nearby Indiana, for 10 years in a row, diligently reduced itsâŻcorporate income taxâŻrate, lowering it from 8.5 percent in 2012 to 4.9 percent today. The Hoosier State already boasts a flat individual income tax rate of 3.23 percent, third lowest in the nation, but a 2022 law will drop the rate to 3.15 percent in 2023 and use future revenue growth to phase down the rate to 2.9 percent over time.
Even Illinois, a notoriously high-tax, high-spending state, has a flat individual income tax rate much lower than Wisconsinâs top rate. In 2020, Illinois voters soundly rejected aâŻproposed constitutional amendmentâŻthat would have allowed the legislature to implement a graduated-rate income tax structure withâŻrates similar to Wisconsinâs.
Finally, this year in neighboring Michigan, legislators have passed tax relief legislation that includes reducing the flat individual income tax rate from 4.25 to 4 percent. It remains to be seen, however, whether any tax relief will be agreed upon between the Republican-controlled legislature and Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D).
While high income tax rates are Wisconsinâs most glaring tax policy problem, they are not the only issue holding Wisconsin back from a competitive tax code. The state also has aâŻmarriage penaltyâŻin its brackets that is imperfectly addressed with a married couple credit, a 3 percentâŻâeconomic development surchargeââŻsome businesses pay in addition to the 7.9 percent corporate income tax rate, and a nonneutral corporate income taxâŻthrowback ruleâŻthat discourages certain multistate firms from originating sales out of Wisconsin. Wisconsin also continues to levy antiquated, nonneutral, and administratively burdensome taxes on certain forms ofâŻbusiness personal property. These and other issues could all be addressed throughâŻcomprehensive tax reform.
Given the strong surpluses Wisconsin hasâŻgenerated in recent yearsâŻand the continued revenue growth the state isâŻexpecting in the future, the Badger State is in a good position to begin tackling comprehensive reform. In fact, state forecasters are projecting Wisconsin will end the current budget cycle with more thanâŻ$3.8 billionâŻin surplus revenue above and beyond what the state plans to spend.
Next year, policymakers should consider using part of this sizable revenue cushion to provide tax relief in a structurally sound way while dedicating a portion of future revenue growth to flattening, consolidating, and reducing income tax rates and adopting other pro-growth reforms that will make the state more attractive to individuals and businesses alike. Many of the states that have recently enacted reforms have usedâŻtax triggersâŻto ensure any future rate reductions are implemented only when the state is in strong fiscal standing and has more than enough revenue to do so. Wisconsin should consider a similar approach.
While Wisconsin has long been one of theâŻhighest-tax states in the nation, that distinction is increasingly detrimental as businesses and individuals enjoy increased economic and geographic mobility. Wisconsin policymakers should therefore consider dedicating a portion of the existing budget surplus, plus a portion of future revenue growth, toward improving the structure of the tax code in a manner that will generate stronger economic growth in the future while improving Wisconsinâs competitive standing compared to regional and national peers.
That tax cut wouldn’t exist at all were it not for Republican control of the Legislature, which tied Evers’ hands. Evers by himself would have, and will, raise taxes with Democrats’ help. That should make your choices in November obvious.

Leave a comment