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Conservatively Speaking

State Senator Mary Lazich (R-New Berlin) represents parts of four counties: Milwaukee, Waukesha, Racine, and Walworth. Her Senate District 28 includes New Berlin, Franklin, Greendale, Hales Corners, Muskego, Waterford, Big Bend, the town of Vernon and parts of Greenfield, East Troy, and Mukwonago. Senator Lazich has been in the Legislature for more than a decade. She considers herself a tireless crusader for lower taxes, reduced spending and smaller government.

Taxes go up, people move out

By Mary Lazich
Friday, Dec 14 2007, 10:31 AM
I’ve written extensively that Wisconsin’s high level of taxation is forcing too many residents to pack up and leave. New data indicates the disturbing trend continues, having a damaging effect on our ability to compete.

During November 2005, the Wisconsin Taxpayer Alliance issued a very troubling report entitled, "Moving In, Moving on: Migration in Wisconsin."  During the five years prior to the 2000 census, almost 669,000 people either moved to or out of Wisconsin. However, the net in-migration into Wisconsin was a meager 7,282.

Individuals with college or advanced degrees were more likely to leave, while those with less education tended to come. Individuals with household incomes above $75,000 left Wisconsin. Those with incomes of $200,000 or more had the highest rates of leaving.

The huge exodus of wealthy Wisconsinites leaving the state caused a loss of an estimated $4.72 billion in net worth and a loss of $455 million in income over the five years of this study. That means far fewer in-state bank deposits, less stock in Wisconsin firms, less investment capital for in-state ventures, and less money given to local charities.

We are losing our best and brightest at a very young age, and we're experiencing retiree flight.

Last month, the USA TODAY reported that Americans are moving across state lines at the highest rate since the early 1990s. U.S, Census Bureau data shows lots of people are moving, but not to Wisconsin that ranks at number 45 among the states, with 1.9 percent of the state’s population in 2006 having moved here from another state.
 Now the Wall Street Journal reports, “Americans are uprooting themselves and moving to places where there is economic vitality, opportunity, and a high quality of life. They are going, in short, to where the action is.”

Arthur Laffer, president of Laffer Associates and Stephen Moore, senior economics writer for The Wall Street Journal editorial board confirm that high taxing and spending have had a negative impact on Wisconsin’s ability to compete and cause many people to relocate elsewhere.

Laffer and Moore write in the Wall Street Journal,  “Five of the states near the bottom of our competitiveness ratings -- Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey and Wisconsin -- have enacted major tax increases in the last two years. Maryland and Michigan just raised business and income taxes on upper-income earners, while arguing that raising the cost of doing business will attract more businesses. More likely it will induce companies to stay away, and people to move out.”

Laffer and Moore say the record movement of citizens across America has little to do with the weather. They say the states with the most dynamic and desirable economies are generally the states with the lowest tax, spending and regulatory burdens. These states win the battle for the prized commodity of human capital. The big losers are high taxing and spending states in the Midwest and Northeast.
 

The American Legislative Exchange Council has just released a study Laffer and Moore conducted that presents a 2007 Economic Competitiveness Rating of the 50 states. During the past decade, Laffer and Moore discovered that, “the 10 states with the highest taxes and spending, and the most intrusive regulations, have half the population and job growth, and one-third slower growth in incomes, than the 10 most economically free states. In 2006 alone 1,500 people each day moved to the states with the highest economic competitiveness from the states with the lowest competitiveness.”

Wisconsin ranks at number 30 on the Economic Competitiveness rating. Hurting Wisconsin is its ranking at number 45 for property tax burden, the fifth worst in the country, a ranking of 30 for the top marginal personal income tax rate, and a ranking of 32 for the top marginal corporate income tax rate.

Laffer and Moore contend that policy decisions made by state legislators matter. They write, “State officials can influence these factors—the economic, fiscal, and social policy legislation that contribute to, or in all too many cases against, the livability of a state. If you don’t believe that economic policies matter, then why is it that thousands upon thousands of people in East Germany risked their lives and fortunes every year to get through the Berlin Wall to move to West Germany? Why is it that Mexicans line up at the U.S. border to get into this nation to live and work here by whatever means they can, but not too many Americans sneak over the border to get into Mexico?”

The prescription is clear. The remedy to stop people from voting with their feet in Wisconsin is to stop the hemorrhaging of taxing and spending.

 

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Comments

twoaday   

Did you notice where those people are moving to?  Is it possible in retirement people move to warmn locales?

December 14, 2007 11:11 AM

twoaday   

Did you notice where those people are moving to?  Is it possible in retirement people move to warmn locales?

December 14, 2007 11:11 AM

had to comment   

Mary equates everything to taxes because she is a hardcore Republican. It's really that simple. It's hard to take anything she says serious because everything always comes back to just pushing the party line.

December 14, 2007 12:30 PM

Ralph Heun   

It is sad that HAD TO COMMENT keeps thinking that everything is the same partisan politics that he/she espouses. Reality of life says that if you have to spend much more here for taxes, than you do in another state with comparable amenities, you must give serious consideration to bailing out too. It is TOO bad that our governor ran on a platform of not raising taxes and then turned 180 degrees and stuck it to us and our descendants who must ultimately pay for the deficient spending.

The present set of Democratic president want to be's are promising higher taxes on the rich, but they are not saying who the rich are, Free universal health care, More free stuff for everybody blah, blah, blah. If they get elected everyone will pay!

Maybe even Had to Comment!

Ralph Heun

December 14, 2007 1:17 PM

Mark Musselman   

They were rude, brazen, and confrontational toward citizens with opposing views.   I wondered how many of them were “on the clock”. Their signs self-righteously declared how we need them, and therefore owe them more.  These were some of the encounters with hundreds of government workers that I witnessed and experienced as I participated in the demonstration against tax increases on October 17th.  

It is now clear how government workers influence our elected officials. We must grapple to keep our hard-earned money more than the bureaucrats who are fighting to take it.  If we don’t act now, the government workers’ numbers will grow to further increase the pressure on our legislators.

Senator Mary Lazich deserves our thanks and support for increasing public discourse on the excessive spending and taxation in Wisconsin.

Mark Musselman

New Berlin

December 14, 2007 5:40 PM

had to comment   

OK you guys are  right. Everything government related is evil and inefficient. The private sector gives us all we need. We don't need government and thus you can keep all your money. Are you happy ?

December 14, 2007 6:38 PM

Uchaishravas   

Gone are the days of Zeidler, when public welfare was something people cared about. I work hard for my money too. But it's simple: I don't live beyond my means. There are people who need that money more than I do.

Government workers influence our elected officials? As opposed to what? Corporate drug companies who lobby politicians with millions of dollars? Or market manipulations that cause blackouts and billions of dollars of surcharges to homes? No, thank you, I think I'll stick with government.

And quite frankly, I don't see what the problem is. Less old people and less yuppies sounds fine to me.

December 16, 2007 12:08 AM

Conservatively Speaking   

There’s evidence that the high level of taxation in states including Wisconsin leads people to move out

December 30, 2007 7:19 PM

Conservatively Speaking   

I have blogged that as taxes go up, people move out of Wisconsin. There is a lot of evidence to suggest

January 9, 2008 3:54 PM

Conservatively Speaking   

Forbes.com has listed its top ten cities that are the most affordable to retire. No Wisconsin city made

November 3, 2008 7:13 AM

Conservatively Speaking   

Whenever a new economic report surfaces about Wisconsin, the news usually isn’t very good, whether it

November 19, 2008 3:41 PM

Conservatively Speaking   

A provision in the 2005-07 state budget phases out taxes on Social Security income. The taxes will be

December 14, 2008 1:24 AM

Conservatively Speaking   

The Wall Street Journal has taken notice that Wisconsin is among several states attempting to balance

April 2, 2009 5:55 PM

Conservatively Speaking   

Wisconsin is again in the national spotlight, and again, for undesirable reasons. The Wall Street Journal

April 10, 2009 9:06 AM

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