1 / 11

Wisconsin’s Machinery & Equipment Tax Exemptions: A Framework for Analysis

Wisconsin’s Machinery & Equipment Tax Exemptions: A Framework for Analysis. Prepared for the Wisconsin Department of Revenue. Agenda. M&E Exemptions Project Components New Estimates Framework Recommendations. Background: M&E Exemptions. Policies Property tax exemption

bonner
Télécharger la présentation

Wisconsin’s Machinery & Equipment Tax Exemptions: A Framework for Analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Wisconsin’s Machinery & EquipmentTax Exemptions: A Framework for Analysis Prepared for the Wisconsin Department of Revenue

  2. Agenda • M&E Exemptions • Project Components • New Estimates • Framework • Recommendations

  3. Background: M&E Exemptions • Policies • Property tax exemption • Sales tax exemption • Goals • Interstate competitiveness • Incentive for manufacturing growth & retention

  4. Project Components • Derive Value of M&E Exemptions • Statutorily required • 10% imputation • Conduct Policy and Practice Review • Literature • Survey of state practices • Develop Framework for Analysis • Apply to M&E exemptions

  5. Deriving New Estimates • Method • Stratified random sampling • 475 manufacturing firms (4.5%) • Weighted by total personal property value (46.2%) • 5 geographic regions, broad range of industries • Results • Composition of M&E in Wisconsin • 93% exempt • 7% taxable

  6. M&E Estimates: Comparison

  7. Framework for Analysis • Economic Development • Job creation, firm attraction, retention & reinvestment • Model impact: output, employment, value-added • IMPLAN, elasticity, multipliers • Equity • Ability to pay (tax incidence) • Public services received • Efficiency • Impact on purchasing and location decisions • Administrative Costs

  8. Economic Development: Impact

  9. Economic Development: Jobs*Based on a Simulated $50 Million Exemption • IMPLAN estimates • Minimum annual cost per job: $6,200 to $10,600 • Net present value: $55,700 to $95,200 • Best-case scenario • Model assumptions • Omits indirect effects • One year impact only • Excludes other firm decision-making factors (e.g. public services)

  10. Recommendations • Set clear goals and metrics when enacting tax incentive policies. • Consider short and long-term evaluations from the beginning. • Target tax exemptions/incentives carefully to achieve the highest return. • Evaluate policies holistically using all four framework categories. If tradeoffs are made, take care to justify them. • Consider the unique economic features of Wisconsin in order to get the highest return. Do not create policies solely on the basis of other states’ actions.

  11. Questions?

More Related