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One of the hallmarks of New Hampshire government is its insistence on maintaining low personal and business tax burdens. To that end, there’s no broad-based standard income, sales or estate tax. Inventory, capital gains, and professional services are also tax-free.Unlike other New England states, however, New Hampshire maintains two major business taxes. The first to be instituted was the Business Profits Tax (BPT). But since the bulk of the state’s businesses range from the small-to-very-small, larger firms complained they were shouldering the bulk of the tax burden. So 1993, the Legislature instituted the Business Enterprise Tax (BET). As Jennifer Weiner writes in “How Does New Hampshire Do It?,” a report released by the Boston Federal Reserve, the BET taxes “wages and salaries, interests and dividends paid by businesses.” In other words, it is, technically, an income tax, but the burden’s placed on businesses, rather than individuals. At 0.75 percent, the BET is also a lower rate than a standard state income tax.The other major piece of New Hampshire’s revenue pie is property tax. Residents pay both a state and town property tax. In 2010, Kiplinger’s reports the State Education Income Tax was “$2.35…per $1,000 of total equalized valuation.” Town rates, meanwhile, can vary widely across the state. If you don’t combine New Hampshire’s two business taxes, property tax makes up the largest slice of revenue, at 16 percent.Another notable aspect of New Hampshire’s tax system, as Weiner notes in the Boston Fed report, is that it’s highly diversified. No one tax makes up 20 percent of money coming in. Other major state taxes include Meals and Rooms, Tobacco, Liquor Sales and Distribution, Real Estate Transfer, Interest and Dividends, Insurance Premium, Communications, and Utility Property Taxes.Summary provided by StateImpact NH

Reassessing Property Taxes, In N.H. And Across The Country

Sarah Miller
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Flickr/CC

New Hampshire, first in the nation when it comes to reliance on this tax, has long debated it. While critics say it’s unevenly distributed, defenders say it’s great for local control and far better than an income tax. And this familiar conversation is playing out across the country, with other states debating the fairness issue and offering alternatives.

This program was originally broadcast on June 12, 2014.

GUESTS:

LINKS:

  • A report from Lincoln Institute of Land Policy's Daphne Kenyon and Adam Langley on Payments In Lieu of Taxes: While PILOTs can provide crucial revenue for municipalities with large nonprofit sectors, there are also major problems with how they are currently collected in many places. To avoid these problems, the report provides general guidelines for when municipalities should consider PILOTs, highlights the importance of municipal–nonprofit collaboration on PILOTs, and outlines alternative ways to raise revenues from tax-exempt nonprofits.
  • Elaine Povich's Stateline article about new alternatives to property taxes: In addition to Pennsylvania, other states also are grappling with how to lower property taxes or make them fairer. But replacing property tax revenue is not easy, and the tax also has defenders – usually the constituencies that would pay more taxes if they went away.
  • A Nashua Telegraph article looks at Census data on property taxes: The total amount of tax collected by the state of New Hampshire is less than that of almost any other state, and barely half the total collected in Massachusetts, according to just-released data from the U.S. Census Bureau.
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