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Economy
The Oregon Travail
2009-06-22
The Labor Department reported yesterday that Oregon's unemployment rate soared to 12.4% in May, the nation's second highest after Michigan's 14.1%. What to do? If you're the geniuses in the state legislature in Salem, you naturally raise taxes.

Last week the legislature approved a $2 billion tax hike on personal income and small businesses that haven't already left the state. The highest tax rate on income above $500,000 would climb to 11% -- up from an already high 9%. Oregon will soon boast the second highest income tax rate in the nation, moving ahead of California (10.55%), and only slightly behind New York City (12.6%). Corporations will pay a 7.9% tax on gross receipts, up from 6.6%.

But that isn't the worst of it. Another revenue raiser will tax hospitals and private health insurance premiums. That's a good way to encourage private employers to drop their health coverage for workers.

In Oregon, as in so many states this year, lawmakers had to choose between reducing the growth of spending and raising taxes. No contest. So government spending will climb by about $2 billion, or almost 4%, which is on top of a 21% increase in the 2007-08 biennium budget. The sliver of good news is that taxpayer groups like Americans for Prosperity of Oregon are promising to put these taxes before the voters in a referendum this year or next. Since Salem's politicians seem intent on following California's, maybe Oregon's voters will do the same and just say no.
Posted by:Fred

#7  FREEREPUBLIC > CALIFORNIA COLLAPSING!?
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2009-06-22 21:37  

#6  So-o-o IOW, NOKOR's IMPROV TAEPONGDONG-2 can't bomb the ALEUTIANS fast enuff???

Gut Nuthin.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2009-06-22 19:02  

#5  On the flip side of this issue
The County Road Association of Michigan warns that 21 of 83 Michigan counties will have to cut back on projects because they won’t have the money to pay their required share for the roadwork – generally a 20% match with federal funds – in 2010-2012.
In my part of Ohio for the last 3 years I have noticed a cutback in road salting & plowing in the winter and a worsening of road surfaces in areas maintained by the cities & counties. This has not made the local news yet.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2009-06-22 12:05  

#4  Thanks, Fred for bringing this up. It is a very nice summary of the political and economical mess that I live in. The county I live in has nearly as high an unemployment figure as Michigan. Our unemployment stats have been higher than the nation's for as long as I can remember - several decades, at least. The majority of people here see themselves as living in a progressive state, instead of a perpetual state of regression. There is a large minority who see things more clearly, but we are firmly a minority. I don't see that we can or will change until a majority of our voters accept the reality that we, collectively, caused the mess we are in and we, collectively have the power to change that. It will just take some honest self examination. Wont happen soon, if ever.
Posted by: Richard of Oregon   2009-06-22 11:35  

#3  At least Oregon has no sales tax for the moment.
--- What would be real news is if a state in trouble like Oregon actually cut its spending back to a year 2000 level.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2009-06-22 11:04  

#2  Looks like we're all working for the government one way or another.
Posted by: JohnQC   2009-06-22 10:00  

#1  I wonder how many garden/granola variety Kalifornians have moved to Oregon in recent yrs and have brought their voting tendencies w/them.

No offense intended to our conservative CA rantburgers who are on the fore front against tax tyranny.
Posted by: Broadhead6   2009-06-22 01:17  

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