Money and Happiness in Alabama

April 14, 2008

It’s not often that a TV program takes on issues of tax equity and corporate giveaways, but they are exactly the focus of this week’s edition of the PBS series NOW, which aired in most places Friday night and is available in its entirety on the show’s

website

.

The report focuses on Alabama, where there’s been an effort by activist groups such as

Alabama Arise!

to reform a state tax system skewed against the poor. Alabama depends heavily on the regressive sales tax—and it is one of the only places in the country that applies the tax to food, which accounts for a larger portion of spending by those with lower incomes. State income taxes are designed so they “

soak the poor

.”

For some state legislators, all this is apparently not a problem. NOW interviews State Rep. Robert Bentley (R-Tuscaloosa), who says of the unequal tax burden on the poor: “I don’t get upset about it. I really don’t…I have too many things to worry about…You can be happy and be poor…Money does not make you happy.” If that’s the case, Alabama, with its lopsided distribution of income, must be one of the happiest places on earth.

The NOW segment notes that while the poor are overtaxed, large corporations are often

under

taxed in Alabama. The state has given large

tax breaks and other subsidies

to automakers such as Mercedes, Hyundai and Honda to lure their assembly plants. Last year, the state put together an $800 million package for a steel mill proposed by the German company ThyssenKrupp. Asked by NOW correspondent Maria Hinojosa whether it is right to allow a large company to operate essentially tax-free for 30 years when the poor are struggling, Rep. Bentley says he supported the deal because it will create jobs. When Hinojosa asks “Did it have to come at so high a price?” Bentley responds: “It does if you’re going to recruit that kind of company…We were in competition with a number of states.”

Actually, ThyssenKrupp chose Alabama even though it was offered a larger package by Louisiana, suggesting that maximum subsidies are not always what make corporations most happy.

Full disclosure: Good Jobs First was consulted by NOW producers during the preparation of the program. Although we are not mentioned in the program, there are a couple of links to our material on the NOW

website

.