By Vivian Wang and Jesse McKinley
ALBANY
— It read like a maddening instruction manual for a do-it-yourself
piece of furniture, with page after page of bare-bones guidance — and
plenty of room for confusion.
If taxpayers and lawmakers were expecting that a new 37-page report would provide a definitive road map of how New York State might sidestep
the effects of President Trump’s new federal tax plan and its sharp
reduction in the deductibility of state and local taxes, they instead
got a view of just how complicated this is.
The
report, released this week, laid out at least a half-dozen ways New
York could rewrite its tax code, with no indication of which option
legislators might pursue. There was a potpourri of progressive rates,
wage credits and tax-withholding schemes, with officials cautioning that
all the options would require further study. No bills have been
drafted.
The
possibilities included completely replacing the state income tax with
an employer-side payroll tax; introducing a new progressive payroll tax
in addition to the existing income tax, with tax credits to make up the
difference; or designing a payroll tax only for wage earners above a
certain income threshold — the taxpayers most likely to be hurt by the
federal tax plan in the first place. Some versions would be mandatory.
Others would be opt-in.\
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Source: The New York Times (via Empire Report New York)
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