I just read the article in the Eagle this morning about Kansas' collection of taxes. The article said that we had another bad month and that some expected that either we would have to make more draconian tax cuts or that taxes would have to be raised (it didn't say but I would imagine that tax raises would be on the backs of the middle class again). I would bet on the draconian cuts. I came across this article that was written last year predicting what would happen while Brownback was talking about the "bright and sunny days" in Kansas on his election commercials (do you all remember?). LOL
"Sam Brownback, governor of Kansas, sincerely believes that he is going to perform a Kansas miracle. And I now accept that he is doing this for what he thinks is the good of the state, not just for self-aggrandizement.
His miracle, as he proclaims it, would happen by eliminating the income tax in Kansas. That plan is built on the notion that somehow, some way, Kansas can become a mini-Texas with dynamic growth. However, Kansas does not have the revenues from oil and gas to offset the elimination of income taxes.
So far, there is no denying the experiment has been a big flop. It is projected by non-partisan Kansas Legislative Research that the rest of the reserves will get eaten up next year to balance the budget, putting the state in a precarious position. And the state will be more than a billion dollars short in the next several years.
The day of reckoning is coming and coming soon.
Then will follow the inevitable budget slashing."
Read more here: http://www.kansascity.com/opinion/op...#storylink=cpy
"Sam Brownback, governor of Kansas, sincerely believes that he is going to perform a Kansas miracle. And I now accept that he is doing this for what he thinks is the good of the state, not just for self-aggrandizement.
His miracle, as he proclaims it, would happen by eliminating the income tax in Kansas. That plan is built on the notion that somehow, some way, Kansas can become a mini-Texas with dynamic growth. However, Kansas does not have the revenues from oil and gas to offset the elimination of income taxes.
So far, there is no denying the experiment has been a big flop. It is projected by non-partisan Kansas Legislative Research that the rest of the reserves will get eaten up next year to balance the budget, putting the state in a precarious position. And the state will be more than a billion dollars short in the next several years.
The day of reckoning is coming and coming soon.
Then will follow the inevitable budget slashing."
Read more here: http://www.kansascity.com/opinion/op...#storylink=cpy
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