Thursday, January 18, 2024

National report ranks MA as #1 most improved in tax fairness


Primarily due to the passage of the Fair Share Amendment, a new national report finds that the Commonwealth is the top-ranking state for improvements in tax fairness. The middle class in Massachusetts pays a smaller share of their income in state + local taxes than in 32 other states.


Today, the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP) released "Who Pays?," the only distributional analysis of tax systems in all 50 states. The comprehensive 7th edition of the report ranks the progressivity and regressivity of state tax systems by measuring effective state and local tax rates paid by all income groups. Massachusetts's relative ranking among the 50 states (in terms of tax progressivity since 2022) improves several positions, the most of any state. This is overwhelmingly a result of the Fair Share Amendment.


However, there is still work to be done. Massachusetts's top 1% still pay a lower share than the bottom 95%. With our tax system still regressive under current law, we can look to neighbors Maine, Vermont and New York for examples of states that have created fair (progressive) tax codes. Read more. 

Read our summary

▶️Watch on YouTube:

Phineas Baxandall speaks on the

findings of ITEP's report

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