Washington State Considers $9 Billion Tax Incentive November 8, 2013 Lyman Stone Lyman Stone A special session of Washington’s state legislature kicked off today with a debate on whether or not to offer a multi-billion dollar incentive package that Boeing claims it needs to set up production for its new 777X in Washington State. This tax incentive is nothing to sneeze at: $9 billion. According to Washington’s Department of Revenue Fiscal Note on the incentive package, those incentives would come from between 0.29 percent and 0.9 percent reductions in the Business & Occupation tax, extra credits against that tax, and sales tax exemptions, extending all these preferences through 2040. The Business & Occupation (B&O) tax is a distortive and destructive tax. Washington State has the highest gross receipts tax of the five states that have these taxes, with a top B&O tax rate of 3.3%. This tax, like all gross receipts taxes, creates tax pyramiding as the revenues of businesses at each level of production are taxed, rather than their net income, or profits. This causes a tax-on-a-tax, and creates incentives for businesses to vertically integrate, even when doing so might not make economic sense without the tax. The fact that Washington State is debating 30-year long incentive packages worth billions of dollars, crediting those incentives directly against a tax that is unique in its distortionary effects, should be a red flag for state legislators. If they’re already willing to enact billions of dollars of long-term revenue reductions, why not just lock in broad, principled tax reform for everyone, not just one major employer that has been moving away from Washington for a while. Washington has many great features of its tax climate that help companies like Boeing: no income tax, so they can recruit talent and save on wage costs; no corporate tax, so they enjoy bigger after-tax profit margins; moderate property taxes, so that fixed investment is not prohibitively expensive. For all these reasons, we rank Washington the 6th best tax climate in the nation in our 2014 State Business Tax Climate Index. But the B&O tax is a major blemish on Washington’s otherwise sound tax climate, much like Texas’ destructive margin tax, on which Texas is wisely decreasing its reliance. Big tax incentives serve as implicit acknowledgments of structural flaws in the tax code. But especially when the tax incentives are as huge and long-term as those proposed in Washington, legislators could as easily just consider broad-based reforms: they’d cost the same, but apply to more people. More on Washington. Stay informed on the tax policies impacting you. Subscribe to get insights from our trusted experts delivered straight to your inbox. Subscribe Share Tweet Share Email Topics Center for State Tax Policy Washington Gross Receipts and Margin Taxes Individual Tax Expenditures, Credits, and Deductions