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In an era of skyrocketing government revenues thanks to the
booming economy the state of Louisiana is apparently concluding
that $377 million in new taxes will be needed just to make ends
meet.
The tax increase, proposed by Governor Mike Foster (R), and currently
under consideration in the legislature, is in sharp contrast to
a dozen other states that have recently cut taxes.
Arizona, Connecticut, Illinois, Kansas, Massachusetts, Minnesota,
New Mexico, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee and
Virginia have all approved significant tax cuts in recent years.
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Arizona: $120 million in tax rebates Source: Americans for Tax Reform |
Americans are in agreement on one point: Gasoline prices, which
recently hit record levels, are too high. But we do have something
to be grateful for: Over the past four decades at least, gasoline
prices haven't risen as much as U.S. postage.
In 1962, a first class stamp was four cents. Today it is 33¢,
and the Postal Service wants to raise the price by another penny.
What's worse, over a hundred million Americans could be hit even
harder by a postage rate increase 3-5 times higher than the 3%
increase the post office is seeking for first class mail. The
Postal Service wants to increase postage rates for magazines and
newspapers by 10-15%.
The 166 million Americans who subscribe to magazines will be hit
hardest by this. They'll have to eat these costs via subscription
rate increases. If they don't, and in some cases, they won't,
some magazines will cease to exist.
A price increase up to 15% isn't necessary. A two-year task
force identified ways to cut the Post Office's costs in delivering
magazines by $150 million.
If the Post Office adopted these measures, the postal rate increase
needed to cover costs for magazine delivery would only have to
be 7.5%, not 15%.
Postmaster General Henderson has indicated that he agrees that magazine postage rate increases could be kept below 10%.
Nevertheless, on January 12 the Postal Service announced up
to a 15% rate increase in magazine postage. The potential cost
savings identified by the task force weren't taken into account.
Why not? One theory is that Postal Service management simply hasn't
gotten around to it.
But with the very survival of some publications in jeopardy if the 15% price increase is approved, and circulation numbers at risk for all publications, publishers are worried. And the increase could hurt the Post Office, too, because it is in the Postal Service's interest to make certain publishers aren't driven out of business or even suffer lower circulation rates.
by Amy Ridenour
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