Ohio Shows the Way on Death Tax Repeal


By BILL BATCHELDER, JACK BOYLE AND DICK PATTEN, The Wall Street Journal

Ohio Gov. John Kasich made good on a major campaign promise Thursday, killing the state’s estate tax in the process of enacting the 2012-13 budget. He also managed to kill off an $8 billion deficit without raising taxes—a model for fiscally squeezed states nationwide.

The end of the death tax, which goes into effect on Jan. 1, 2013, will help stop the hemorrhaging of small businesses and jobs from the Buckeye State. Ohioans had suffered long enough with the levy on inheritances, with a 6% tax on personal and business assets above the $338,333 exemption, up to $500,000, and a 7% tax on assets above $500,000. The death tax was a major reason that business, jobs and capital have fled the state.

Ohio’s nearly 200,000 small businesses employ some 2.3 million people—about half the civilian labor force—and support annual payrolls exceeding $77 billion. But businesses and jobs have been leaving Ohio for years, many to the 28 states without a death tax.

The stampede for the exits comes as no surprise: Dying in Ohio was expensive. When federal (35% on all assets exceeding $5 million) and state taxes are combined, an Ohio family with a successful business could lose up to 40% of everything they had worked for.

While some opponents of repeal defend the death tax on the grounds that the state, like the federal government, needs the revenue, the truth is it yielded little revenue—around 2% of the average local jurisdiction’s revenues in Ohio, less than two-tenths of 1% for Columbus, and around 1% for Washington.

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