Monday, October 02, 2017

Fixing one piece of Memphis’s Economic Malaise

Fixing Memphis’s economic malaise is daunting, to say the least, but with a 27.6% poverty rate, I expect our Memphis leadership to address the inequities that plague our tax base – inequities that are as clear as day: 165,679 (42.3%) of the Memphis workforce are non-residents working in the city out of a total of 391,232 workers in our city. This means 225,553 (57.7%) of working Memphis residents are paying property taxes and supporting the city. Non-resident Memphis workers use Memphis streets, parks, sewers, museums and other amenities…. but leave the city in order to avoid paying Memphis taxes (AND flee the high cost of private schools).

It is my understanding that the City of Memphis does not have the legal right, according to state law, to create a payroll tax for our “working non-residents” - even though non-resident income tax laws have been on many states' books for decades. 
 I would suggest that the City do what Comcast/Xfinity does…create a payroll FEE to equalize this loophole destroying Memphis.

On first blush, one could say this would be a disincentive for Memphis businesses. On the contrary, it would incentivize workers to move to Memphis. In addition, the city could use these fees to give better incentives to businesses to move to Memphis.

This doesn’t address the failure of local school systems and the NEED for good, safe public schools, which I believe has equal weighting with taxes when a family with 2 kids decides to move to Collierville.


I applaud the Strickland administration for it’s strict, frugal, economic policies to date, but fundamental “outside the box” ideas are needed to address the obvious weaknesses in our city.

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