Thursday, November 26, 2009

Nation

States Eye Higher Taxes on Beer, Wine, and Liquor

But raising the price of booze draws a strong backlash from the industry and some consumers

Posted December 18, 2008

SAN FRANCISCO—When Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger proposed raising California's tax on alcohol by a nickel a drink earlier this week, part of an ongoing effort to close the state's $40 billion budget gap, California became the 27th state this year to consider raising taxes on beer, wine, and liquor to prop up its sagging budget. Schwarzenegger claimed the tax increase would generate nearly $900 million in new revenue over the next year and a half.

The measure was tabled yesterday during the latest round of budget negotiations, but experts say it is only a matter of time before another state picks up where California left off, turning to booze to solve its revenue problems.

Some states, to be fair, are raising revenue from liquor sales in a way that's good for them as well as for consumers. This summer, Colorado lawmakers lifted a decades-long ban on Sunday liquor sales, boosting the state's excise tax returns by 7 percent. Lawmakers in a half-dozen other states, including Indiana, West Virginia, and Georgia, are considering similar changes. According to a recent study, the 12 states that have abandoned their Prohibition-era Sunday sales restrictions in recent years have generated more than $200 million in annual state revenue.

Most lawmakers don't have the luxury of finding another day of the week when retailers can sell alcohol, of course. Thus, liquor taxes have found their way into budget talks. Earlier this year, Eliot Spitzer, the now departed governor of New York, proposed raising taxes on malt liquor and small cigars to help close the state's then $4.4 billion shortfall; he said the increase would add $738 million to the state's coffers. California lawmakers, for their part, promised earlier this week to use the revenue from their proposed 5-cent tax increase for drug and alcohol abuse treatment and prevention programs.

These tax increases may be for a good cause—lawmakers have to find some way to continue funding education and Medicaid, after all—but experts are cautioning states against using the recession to go after their constituents' liquor. Alcohol may be a luxury item, they say, but most voters don't support tax hikes on liquor the way they do on, say, tobacco.

"When revenue is needed for either balancing a budget or funding a particular spending priority, cigarette taxes have been a popular way to do it," says Bert Waisanen, a fiscal analyst at the National Conference of State Legislatures. "A lot of people are aware of the health risk, and they've formed their opinion. But alcohol, for some reason, is different."

Maine lawmakers learned this lesson the hard way earlier this year.

After passing a law that raised revenue for a state health insurance program by doubling taxes on beer and wine, state legislators were surprised to find themselves facing a taxpayer revolt. Even though the tax increased prices by only 16 cents for a six-pack of beer and 7 cents for a bottle of wine, it was widely denounced across the state. A group of angry beer and wine sellers—and their loyal customers—rallied to put an initiative on the ballot to repeal the measure. With the help of the deep-pocketed liquor industry, the initiative passed with 64 percent of the vote.

So far this year, all 27 of the proposals to raise state taxes on alcohol have been defeated or withdrawn.

"There has been a propensity to look at alcohol taxes historically as a way to raise revenue—this is part of the playbook that exists from Prohibition," says David Wojnar, vice president of government affairs at the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States, an industry lobbying group. "But a down economy is never a good time to add costs to any consumer good. It hurts small mom-and-pops, it hurts the bartenders, the waiters, the waitresses—the people who are driving the economy."

There is a case to be made, of course, that taxes on liquor, just like taxes on cigarettes, do have their time and their place. While raising revenue for the state, taxes on alcohol can also reduce consumption of a product known to cause health problems and contribute to other problems, such as traffic accidents.

There is a reason why roughly 50 percent of the purchase price of a bottle of liquor is due to taxes and fees.

Reader Comments

Cat of CA

Cat of CA, stop acting stupid. Just because you don't drink or smoke doesn't mean your opinion is correct. i don't smoke, but I know friends who do, and if that's what they wanna do, then fine. That's not a problem for me. I do drink, and some of us like to do that, and i don't think there's anything wrong with that. If they said they were gonna jack car insurance rates for you by 400 percent, or something similar, I'm sure you would be complaining. There's nothing wrong with drinking. Some people like to, and are angry because the government is trying to make it more expensive. Why is it so ok to tax liquor above everything else? Why is it so bad? Let me know. You don't understand, obviously.

ShareYourVoice

HAVE YOUR VOICE BE HEARD AND MAKE A DIFFERENCE!!!

Taking action is easy and won't take much of your time, but it will make a giant difference: CLICK THE LINK http://www.axetaxesnotjobs.com/ and fill out the form to join the fight against irresponsible and regressive taxes.

"This will cost jobs in our industry— including those of small business owners, servers and bartenders like you who are the lifeblood of our economy. We need your personal involvement and help“

Thank you

??

I don't see what the big deal would be to tax alcohol or cigarettes. They are luxury items, and it's not like people should be stocking up on liquor and cigarettes during hard economic times anyway (it's all ready expensive and probably not good for your health. Maybe you people should go put that money in a savings account.)

I think it's funny that people get so heated over substances. Maybe that passion should be put elsewhere where it can really help the economy.

In closing... stop voting this down.

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