Michigan is in a hurry to cut taxes. Is a pet food tax exemption next?
LANSING — Tax cut fever is raging in Lansing, and now some legislators want to exempt pet food from the state’s 6 percent sales tax.
One day after their counterparts in the Senate voted to trim income taxes, members of the House Committee on Taxes and Policy on Tuesday debated two bills to repeal taxes on pet food as well as commercial feed.
The savings: About $42 per year per dog, for those who spend $700 per year on pet food, which is about average.
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“These bills will not only save money for everyday pet owners but also for individuals with service animals that don’t itemize their taxes,” said bill sponsor Rep. Tommy Bran, R-Wyoming, who is one of the bills’ sponsors.
“These bills are important for people who love their companions.”
Based on pet ownership statistics, the state expects pet food sales to exceed $1.7 billion this year. Michigan nonprofit animal shelters qualify for a sales tax exemption but they need to apply for the exemption annually.
The exemption would cost the state about $100 million of the $31 billion it collects annually in taxes and fees, according to the House Fiscal Agency.
Schools would take the biggest hit from the tax loss, about $70.9 million of the $16 billion School Aid Fund.
Michigan charges sales tax on prepared food like restaurant orders, but exempts the tax on groceries and “live animals purchased with the intent to be slaughtered for human consumption."
Most states charge sales tax on pet food, except Washington D.C. and Florida, which exempts prescription food.
Rep. Pat Outman, R-Six Lakes, raised concerns about the money Michigan would lose from the proposal.
“I have issues with stripping from our sales and use tax,” Outman said. “I’d rather approach a reduction in income for folks to be able to provide for pets than attacking our sales tax.”
Outman was referring to a Republican proposal, Senate Bill 768, that would lower the state income tax rates to 3.9 percent from 4.25 percent for individuals and 6 percent for corporations. The plan would also offer a $500 tax credit per child under the age of 19.
The debate comes as Republicans who control the Legislature and Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer are dueling over tax cuts as the state Treasury is flush with cash.
Legislators are debating how to spend down a $7 billion state revenue surplus and another $7 billion in federal stimulus funds. Whitmer on Wednesday called the Senate tax cut proposal “not sustainable” and that it would "undermine our ability to fund things like education and infrastructure and public safety."
Whitmer has pitched smaller and targeted tax cuts as part of a massive $74.1 billion budget proposal that Republicans have criticized.
The governor wants to phase out a tax on pension income, a tiered system applying a 4.25 percent income tax on pensions depending on the payer’s age, and reverse a 2011 cut to the Earned Income Tax Credit for lower income workers.
Legislators sponsoring the bill to cut the retirement tax say Michigan’s surplus revenue can cover the estimated $350 million to $500 million shortfall.
On Feb. 4, legislation exempting menstrual products from the state’s sales and use tax took effect.
Michigan collected $7 million in tampon taxes each year, according to nonpartisan fiscal agencies. The state’s tax code had classified menstrual items as “luxury goods,” even though medical supplies (but not over-the-counter drugs) are exempt from the tax.
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