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Economy / Taxes

House Voting on Corporate Income Taxes

By Natalie Robinson on May 1, 2024
Missouri state capitol
Dennis MacDonald / Shutterstock

Recently, the Missouri House passed a bill—House Bill (HB) 2274—that would gradually repeal the corporate income tax. HB 2274 would cut the current corporate income tax rate from 4% to 3% on January 1 and would continue to make cuts by a percentage point every year until abolishing the tax entirely in 2028.

Getting rid of the corporate income tax has many benefits, chief among them is raising Missouri’s GDP growth rate. Countless studies have found that corporate income taxes are economically harmful. Missouri ranks 26th in the United States for GDP growth, and eliminating this tax would make Missouri a more competitive, pro-growth state. While eliminating the corporate income tax would mean giving up the $900 million in revenues that the tax raised in 2023, some of the lost revenue would be offset by higher sales and personal income tax revenues owing to stronger economic growth. Moreover, the gradual nature of the phase-out would ease the transition.

Cutting the corporate income tax rate will also lead to business growth. A 2016 peer-reviewed article in the American Economic Review found that a 1% cut in a state’s corporate income tax rate leads to a 3–4% growth in the number of establishments over a 10-year period. The study found that a lower corporate tax is also good for increasing entrepreneurship. Missouri will become more attractive to both new and existing businesses with the elimination of the corporate income tax.

Another study found that a little more than half of the total incidence of corporate taxation falls on consumers through higher product prices, with capital owners bearing only 20% and workers bearing the remaining 28%. The Tax Foundation reports that, because corporate income taxes make it more expensive for businesses to invest in technology and equipment, eliminating the tax can increase efficiency which would generate higher revenue for companies. A tax cut will enable companies to not only increase wages but also create new jobs. If Missouri’s policymakers want to increase overall economic growth, HB 2274 is a step in the right direction.

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About the author

Natalie Robinson

Intern

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