Sign Up for Our E-Newsletter   

Motorists in Illinois are paying $4.06 per gallon of gas — $0.40 more than the national average.
5/24/2013
Open bargaining essential to avoid government corruption
5/24/2013
Institute on WJPF Radio: Tom Miller and John Tillman discuss pension cost-shift proposal
5/23/2013
Failed “Amazon tax” heads to Illinois Supreme Court
5/23/2013
Institute on WQAD 8: Pension “pick-up” for teachers under fire
5/23/2013
CPS school closings: district spares some schools, but problems still persist
5/23/2013
Daily Links for May 23
5/23/2013
New study finds that Medicaid doesn't improve health outcomes
5/23/2013
Taxing the Net: Lessons from Illinois
5/23/2013
Illinois speed limit hike goes to Gov. Quinn
5/22/2013
Northwest Herald: Quinn could play Santa Claus by reforming state tax code
Share |

11/21/2012

Illinois Policy Institute Journalist in Residence Scott Reeder had this article published in the Northwest Herald.


If Gov. Pat Quinn is looking to moonlight during the holiday season, he ought to consider becoming a gift wrapper at Sears.

After all, the governor promised the retail giant $150 million in subsidies within the last year. He might as well have tied it with a bow on top. Welcome to the goofy world of Illinois corporate welfare.

In 2011, the Legislature jacked up corporate income taxes by 46 percent, and before the year was out, it managed to give away a portion to – you guessed it – corporations.

A sweetheart deal with Sears Holding Corp. and CME Group Inc. managed to slice away a portion of the new revenues right off the top.

It’s a “government knows best” mindset that serves neither the taxpayer nor the economy well.

Folks on the left call it corporate welfare; on the right, they call it crony capitalism. Let’s just call it shameful behavior.

Instead of jacking up taxes on every business in the state and then trying to redistribute the wealth to favored corporations and constituencies, how about having a low tax rate for everyone?

It’s seldom talked about in the halls of the Statehouse, but Illinois has an abysmal environment for entrepreneurs.

The state ranks 48th in the country in generating jobs through the creation of new businesses, according to data collected between 1995 and 2009. And this was before the state increased the personal income tax rate by 67 percent and the corporate income tax rate by 46 percent.

Tax hikes are never good news for businesses. Money that could be plowed back into business to hire more employees, increase marketing or improve services instead is siphoned away to fund government.

Politicians love to dole out money to Fortune 500 companies because it makes them look like big shots. And big companies like to threaten to move so they can milk subsidies from government. But that leaves small businesses in the dust.

If you are big and powerful in Illinois, government anoints you a winner. If you are small business, on the other hand, it’s shut up and pay your taxes.


Illinois Policy Institute Privacy Policy | © Copyright 2013, Illinois Policy Institute