The Hall income tax is a Tennessee state tax on interest and dividend income from investments. It is the only tax on personal income in Tennessee, which does not levy a general state income tax. The tax rate prior to 2016 was 6 percent, applied to all taxable interest and dividend income over $1250 per person ($2500 for married couples filing jointly). Revenues are shared with the government of the municipality or county where the taxpayer resides. In 2016, the state reduced the Hall income tax to 5% with intention to eliminate it completely. On April 26, 2017 Governor Haslam signed the IMPROVE Act into law, which implements the following timeline for phase out of the Hall Tax:
- Effective Dates for Tax Rates
- 4% for tax years beginning January 1, 2017, and prior to January 1, 2018
- 3% for tax years beginning January 1, 2018, and prior to January 1, 2019
- 2% for tax years beginning January 1, 2019, and prior to January 1, 2020
- 1% for tax years beginning January 1, 2020, and prior to January 1, 2021
- Full repeal for tax years beginning January 1, 2021
Video Hall income tax
History
The Hall tax was established by action of the Tennessee General Assembly in 1929, by Chapter 86, Public Acts of 1929, enacted on April 10, 1929. It is named for Frank S. Hall, the state senator who sponsored the legislation. Authority for the tax derives from the 1870 amendments to the Tennessee State Constitution, which gave the General Assembly the power "to levy a tax on incomes derived from stocks and bonds that are not taxed ad valorem." A 2004 analysis suggests that this provision of the state constitution was intended to address difficulties that Tennessee government had experienced in its efforts to apply property tax to intangible forms of property. A 1929 opinion of the Tennessee Supreme Court, issued in the case of Shields v. Williams and written by Chief Justice Grafton Green, found that the Hall tax was a privilege tax, not a property tax. This meant that the Hall tax was not subject to a provision of the state constitution requiring all property to be taxed uniformly.
At first the tax rate was 5% and all collected revenue was directed to the state government. In 1931 the General Assembly amended the law to require that 45% of the revenue be distributed to local governments. This had the effect of allocating 2.75 percentage points of the taxable income to the state government and 2.25 points to local government.
In 1937 the tax rate was increased to 6% and the portion allocated to local governments was reduced to three-eighths of the total, thus keeping the local government share at 2.25 percentage points of the taxable income reported by the local jurisdiction's residents. These rates remain in effect as of 2014.
In 2002, the Tennessee Department of Revenue established an electronic filing system for the Hall income tax and ended its former practice of mailing tax forms to taxpayers believed to be subject to the tax.
In 2016, Gov. Bill Haslam signed a bill to reduce the Hall income tax for tax year 2016, with the intent of ultimately eliminating the tax as state government revenue increases from year to year.
Maps Hall income tax
Applicability
The Hall tax applies to interest and dividend income received by people who maintain their legal residence in Tennessee, including part-year residents who live in the state at least six months of the year.
Dividends subject to the tax are dividends from corporations, investment trusts, and mutual funds, including capital gains distributions from mutual funds. Taxable forms of interest include interest on bonds issued by persons, corporations, churches, joint stock companies, business trusts, U.S. states and local political subdivisions outside Tennessee, and foreign governments; and interest on mortgages, commercial paper, and other written obligations that mature more than six months after the date of issue. The tax does not apply to income from government obligations issued by the U.S. federal government and Tennessee state or local governments. Dividends from stock in banks and similar institutions (but not bank holding companies), as well as several types of Tennessee business, are exempt from the tax. Interest paid on bank and credit union accounts also is not subject to the Hall tax, regardless of the location of the bank.
The first $1,250 of a person's interest and dividend income that would otherwise be subject to the Hall tax is exempt from taxation. Married couples may file joint returns, in which case $2,500 of the couple's joint taxable interest and dividend income is exempt. Blind people and people over 65 years old whose total annual income is $33,000 or less ($59,000 for joint filers) are not subject to the Hall income tax. Some interest and dividend income received by quadriplegics also is exempt.
Evasion of the Hall income tax may be prosecuted as a Class E felony, with penalties of up to two years in state prison and up to $3000 in fines. The Tennessee Department of Revenue uses Internal Revenue Service data to assist in identifying taxable income that is not being reported.
Revenues collected
The Hall income tax accounts for about 2% of Tennessee's state tax collections. Revenue from the Hall tax peaked at $289.7 million in state fiscal year (FY) 2008, when almost 192,000 households paid Hall income tax based on returns filed for calendar year 2007. Hall income tax collections totaled $213.9 million and $172 million for calendar years 2008 and 2009, respectively (paid in state FYs 2009 and 2010). About 156,000 state households paid the tax in FY 2009 for income received in 2008.
Revenue from the Hall income tax varies significantly from year to year, making it difficult for governments to predict. Some of the largest year-to-year changes occurred in FY 1998, when collections increased 25.5% from the previous year, and FYs 2002 and 2009, when collections dropped 26.1% from the previous years. A principal reason for the large variability in revenues is the application of the tax to capital gains distributions from mutual funds. A 2004 report by the Tennessee Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations (TACIR) observed that capital gains from investments had displayed "roller-coaster behavior" over the preceding eight years. TACIR identified this variability, coupled with increased investor participation in mutual funds, as the main cause of fluctuations in Hall tax collections during the same period.
Distributions to municipalities and counties
Three-eighths of Hall income tax payments are distributed to the local government of the municipality or county where the taxpayer resides. There are no restrictions on how local governments use the money. This distribution arrangement may be related to the genesis of the Hall tax as a property tax on an intangible property.
Distributions to municipalities are generally larger than distributions to counties. In FY 2003, combined distributions to all of the state's municipalities totaled $42,332,061, or an average of $13.22 per municipal resident, while distributions to counties were $8,184,443, an average of only $3.30 for each resident living outside city limits. In FY 2003, the largest per capita recipient of Hall income tax distributions was Belle Meade, a wealthy enclave in Metropolitan Nashville-Davidson County, which received a per capita distribution of $491.68. At the low end, 14 municipalities had no income from the Hall tax. Per capita distributions to counties ranged from a high of $15.41 to Williamson County to a low of $0.40 to Hancock County.
Although the Hall income tax is a relatively minor source of revenue for most local governments, it is a major source of funds for a few small municipalities, particularly those with wealthy residents. The government of the City of Belle Meade receives over one-third of its revenue from the Hall income tax. Other Tennessee municipalities identified as highly dependent on the tax, based on 1997 data, are Forest Hills, Allardt, Lookout Mountain, Slayden, and Walden.
In FY 2010, combined payments to Knox County and its included municipalities (including Knoxville) totaled $12.5 million, the highest of any county in the state. Shelby County and its municipalities (including Memphis) received a total of $11.4 million, while Davidson County and its municipalities (including Nashville) received a total of $10.4 million. Other counties where combined payments to the county and municipalities exceeded $1 million were Hamilton County ($5 million), Williamson County ($4.5 million), Sullivan County ($1.4 million), and Sumner County ($1.3 million). At the low end, Hancock County and its municipalities received a total of $2,755.
Criticisms and proposals for changes
The Hall income tax has been the subject of chronic criticism, primarily for being regressive and for having a negative impact on retired people. The IMPROVE Act, enacted in 2017 to phase out the tax, is the latest in a long line of legislative proposals that would eliminate it, replace it with a general personal income tax, or change its rates or exemptions. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, there were bills to raise state government revenue by reducing the fraction of the Hall tax that is distributed to local governments.
The proposals for major changes to the Hall tax failed because of the lack of alternative sources of revenue. The Hall tax is Tennessee's only tax on personal income; the state does not levy a general personal income tax. As of 1974, the Tennessee Supreme Court had consistently held that the state constitution authorized only three types of taxes: privilege taxes, ad valorem property taxes, and a tax on income from interest and dividends. In decisions in 1932 and 1960, the court rejected proposals for a general personal income tax. However, in 1981, 1991, and 1999, three different Tennessee Attorneys General issued opinions that a general income tax would not violate the state constitution.
In December 2004, a commission established to study the state's tax structure said the Hall income tax was regressive, anti-competitive, and "unfairly selective." However, the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP) said the Hall Tax is actually the only major progressive tax levied in Tennessee--amounting to 0.4 percent of income for high-income taxpayers compared to 0.0-0.1 percent for less affluent Tennesseans. The Tennessee Tax Structure Study Commission characterized the tax as "particularly harmful to retirees with limited income derived mainly from investments," noting in its final report that low-income retirees with dividend and interest income pay the tax, but low-income people with income from other sources do not. The report also said the Hall tax "encourages retirees to leave the State." The commission recommended repealing the Hall income tax, reducing or repealing certain other state taxes, and enacting a general personal income tax in their place. Other critics have suggested that the tax discourages people from saving and hinders efforts to encourage retirees to settle in Tennessee. Organizations including the League of Women Voters of Tennessee and Tennesseans for Fair Taxation have endorsed the repeal of the Hall income tax as part of comprehensive tax reform that includes implementation of a broad-based personal income tax. In its "Legislator's Guide to the Issues" issued in 2009 and 2011, the Tennessee Center for Policy Research called the 6 percent rate "sizeable" and said the tax "makes Tennessee an unwelcoming place, particularly for retirees and the wealthy." The organization advocated repealing the tax "to encourage wealthy and retired individuals to move to Tennessee" and cutting state spending to offset the lost revenue.
In the 2011 General Assembly, eight bills were introduced to reduce or eliminate the Hall tax, including a total phase-out comparable to the one enacted in 2017. The only one that passed was a measure to increase the income exemptions for persons over 65 by $10,000, to $26,200 for individual taxpayers and $37,000 for joint filers. It made about 4,725 taxpayers eligible for the exemption, reducing revenue by about $1.65 million, including $1 million for the state and $650,000 for local governments. Governor Bill Haslam had earlier endorsed this proposal, saying: "If you're retired and living on dividends, I'm not sure why you should be treated so much different from someone who's living on a salary."
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia