INSIGHT KANSAS: Messing with Texas - Pittsburg, KS - Morning Sun
INSIGHT KANSAS: Messing with Texas

INSIGHT KANSAS: Messing with Texas

By MICHAEL A. SMITH
Posted Mar 19, 2013 @ 01:30 PM
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“Look out Texas, here comes Kansas!”  So said Governor Brownback in this year’s State of the State address.  The Governor looks down south and sees Kansas’ future.  Brownback particularly admires Texas’ lack of a personal income tax: his goal for our state.  I am skeptical.  Despite frozen weather, it is Minnesota that stands out in most quality-of-life surveys, finishing third in the recent Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index.
Which state should be our guide?  Let’s go to the numbers.  First come the costs.  According to the Tax Foundation, in 2010, the total, per-capita state and local tax cost for Texans is 3,104, or 7.9% of income.  Kansas’ figures are $3802 and 9.7%, and Minnesotans pay $4727, or 10.8%.   The average-income Minnesotan shells out $1623 more in state and local taxes each year than her counterpart in Texas, with Kansas in between.  Is it worth it?
Brownback promises that Texas-sized tax cuts will grow our economy.  By this logic, Minnesota’s tax “burden” should be detrimental.  The numbers tell a different story.   Minnesota’s per-capita income, at $43,790 is a good deal higher than either Texas’ ($39,142), or Kansas’ ($39,389).  And growth?  From 2000 to 2010, per-capita income in Texas grew by 26%, narrowly edging out Minnesota’s 24%.  Kansas outshines both states, with a 31% growth rate.    Minnesota wins hands-down for per-capita income, Kansas for growth, and Texas for neither.  In fact, the average Minnesotan takes home more money after paying state and local taxes:  $39,063 in Minnesota, $36,038 in Texas, and $35,587 in Kansas.  
What does all this money buy?  One thing is health care, and the gap is vast.  One in four Texans has no health insurance:  at 24.6%, that is the highest percentage in the nation.  Minnesota approaches the other end of the spectrum at 9%. Only Hawaii and Massachusetts have lower percentages of uninsured.  Kansas comes up in between, at 13%.  Furthermore, Minnesotans literally live two and a half years longer than Kansas or Texans.  Average life expectancy is 80.9 years for Minnesota, 78.4 years for Kansas, and 78.3 for Texas.  
Which state lights the way for schooling?  According to the U.S. Census, 80.4% of Lone Star State residents graduated from high school, 26.1% hold Bachelor’s degrees or higher: both lower than national averages.  Minnesota blows these numbers away:  91.6% high-school grads, 31.8% bachelor’s or higher: among the nation’s highest.  Kansas’ numbers are respectable, too: 89.5% and 29.7%.  On the other hand, Texas incarcerates a quarter million of its own people.  For every 100,000 Texans, 632 are in prison.  The comparable statistic for Kansas is just over half that:  324 per 100,000.  Minnesota almost halves the numbers again: 183 per 100,000.  On a per-capita basis, Texas has three and a half times as many of its own citizens in prisons as does Minnesota; twice as many as Kansas.
These numbers tell a starkly different story than this year’s State of the State Address.  Governor Brownback prefers to mess with Texas.  As for me, when it comes to benchmarking state and local policy, I’ll listening for the news from Lake Wobegon.  

Michael A. Smith is an associate professor at Emporia State University. Sources cited in this column are available upon request.

“Look out Texas, here comes Kansas!”  So said Governor Brownback in this year’s State of the State address.  The Governor looks down south and sees Kansas’ future.  Brownback particularly admires Texas’ lack of a personal income tax: his goal for our state.  I am skeptical.  Despite frozen weather, it is Minnesota that stands out in most quality-of-life surveys, finishing third in the recent Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index.
Which state should be our guide?  Let’s go to the numbers.  First come the costs.  According to the Tax Foundation, in 2010, the total, per-capita state and local tax cost for Texans is 3,104, or 7.9% of income.  Kansas’ figures are $3802 and 9.7%, and Minnesotans pay $4727, or 10.8%.   The average-income Minnesotan shells out $1623 more in state and local taxes each year than her counterpart in Texas, with Kansas in between.  Is it worth it?
Brownback promises that Texas-sized tax cuts will grow our economy.  By this logic, Minnesota’s tax “burden” should be detrimental.  The numbers tell a different story.   Minnesota’s per-capita income, at $43,790 is a good deal higher than either Texas’ ($39,142), or Kansas’ ($39,389).  And growth?  From 2000 to 2010, per-capita income in Texas grew by 26%, narrowly edging out Minnesota’s 24%.  Kansas outshines both states, with a 31% growth rate.    Minnesota wins hands-down for per-capita income, Kansas for growth, and Texas for neither.  In fact, the average Minnesotan takes home more money after paying state and local taxes:  $39,063 in Minnesota, $36,038 in Texas, and $35,587 in Kansas.  
What does all this money buy?  One thing is health care, and the gap is vast.  One in four Texans has no health insurance:  at 24.6%, that is the highest percentage in the nation.  Minnesota approaches the other end of the spectrum at 9%. Only Hawaii and Massachusetts have lower percentages of uninsured.  Kansas comes up in between, at 13%.  Furthermore, Minnesotans literally live two and a half years longer than Kansas or Texans.  Average life expectancy is 80.9 years for Minnesota, 78.4 years for Kansas, and 78.3 for Texas.  
Which state lights the way for schooling?  According to the U.S. Census, 80.4% of Lone Star State residents graduated from high school, 26.1% hold Bachelor’s degrees or higher: both lower than national averages.  Minnesota blows these numbers away:  91.6% high-school grads, 31.8% bachelor’s or higher: among the nation’s highest.  Kansas’ numbers are respectable, too: 89.5% and 29.7%.  On the other hand, Texas incarcerates a quarter million of its own people.  For every 100,000 Texans, 632 are in prison.  The comparable statistic for Kansas is just over half that:  324 per 100,000.  Minnesota almost halves the numbers again: 183 per 100,000.  On a per-capita basis, Texas has three and a half times as many of its own citizens in prisons as does Minnesota; twice as many as Kansas.
These numbers tell a starkly different story than this year’s State of the State Address.  Governor Brownback prefers to mess with Texas.  As for me, when it comes to benchmarking state and local policy, I’ll listening for the news from Lake Wobegon.  

Michael A. Smith is an associate professor at Emporia State University. Sources cited in this column are available upon request.

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