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Violence and arrests at campus protests across the nation; CA election worker turnover has soared in recent years; Pediatricians: Watch for the rise of eating disorders in young athletes; NV tribal stakeholders push for Bahsahwahbee National Monument.

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House Democrats say they'll vote to table a motion to remove Speaker Johnson, former President Trump faces financial penalties and the threat of jail time for violating a gag order and efforts to lower the voting age gain momentum nationwide.

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Bidding begins soon for Wyoming's elk antlers, Southeastern states gained population in the past year, small rural energy projects are losing out to bigger proposals, and a rural arts cooperative is filling the gap for schools in Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

New Tax Report: AZ State Budget Easy to Balance

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Tuesday, May 31, 2011   

PHOENIX - As Arizona lawmakers cut education, health care and human services to balance the state budget, a new study says there's a simpler and far less painful way to turn deficits into surpluses. It suggests flipping state tax structures, so that the wealthiest pay the rates that low-income wage earners are now paying, and vice versa. That would immediately wipe out Arizona's budget shortfall, according to report co-author Karen Kraut, an analyst and coordinator of state tax policy with the think tank United for a Fair Economy.

She says today's political culture has contributed to the misperception that the wealthy pay their fair share in taxes, if not more. She thinks that's because tax debates tend to center on the federal income tax.

"Pretty much every other tax - especially taxes at the state and local level - hit the lower- and middle-income folks a lot harder than the wealthy."

She says the top 20 percent of taxpayers in Arizona pay 5.5 percent of their income in state and local taxes, whereas the lowest-income taxpayers pay 12.5 percent of their income. Reversing those figures, she says, would raise $14 billion for the state's coffers.

The report says it isn't just Arizona that would benefit from progressive taxation. Inverting tax structures would bring states across the country $490 billion in new revenues, according to Kraut.

"Every single state in the nation has a tax system that is regressive, that taxes the lowest-income families at a greater share of their income than the most wealthy families."

She says wealthy people should not fear progressive taxation, because with greater fairness comes greater overall economic stability and growth.

"When low- and middle-income people have more money to spend in the economy, they purchase things, and the economy gets revved up and the people who own businesses and the people who invest in the stock market gain from those economy-enhancing activities."

Kraut says there's been a redistribution of wealth over the past three decades because of increasingly regressive tax systems. That's one reason that top incomes have soared, while lower incomes have stagnated.

The study is available at www.faireconomy.org




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