Showing posts with label Tax Foundation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tax Foundation. Show all posts

Thursday, November 20, 2014

October 2014 General Fund Revenue Collections Up

October 2014 General Fund Revenue Collections Up 4.4% From The Previous Year And Fiscal-Year-To-Date Collections up 6.1%

~ All Major Sources Accounted for the Gain ~

RICHMOND - Governor McAuliffe announced that General Fund revenue increased 4.4% from the previous year with all major sources contributing to the increase. October is not a significant month in terms of general fund revenue collection but regular monthly collections are due in withholding, sales taxes, and most minor sources. Corporate and individual income tax extension return processing begins in October as corporate extension returns are due October 15 and individual extension returns are due November 1.  

In speaking about the revenue collections, Governor McAuliffe said, “We have been blessed with good revenue performance since the beginning of this fiscal year. While I welcome this trend, I remain cautiously optimistic as much uncertainty still exists. Our continued efforts to diversify and to build a new Virginia economy are vital to our ongoing financial health and they constitute the proper course to improve the long term performance of the Virginia economy.”

On a fiscal year-to-date basis, total revenue collections rose 6.1%, well ahead of the revised annual forecast of 2.9% growth. The main drivers of the revenue increase were the individual income tax, the corporate income tax, and sales tax.

With one less deposit day compared with last year, collections of payroll withholding taxes rose 3.4% in October.  October is not a significant month for collections in nonwithholding, however collections rose 12.5% in October from last year. Collections of sales and use taxes, reflecting September sales, rose 1.8% in October.  October corporate income tax collections include estimated payments from corporations with a February through January fiscal year, including many retailers. Collections of corporate income taxes were down $11.8 million in October, which compares favorably with receipts of negative $17.2 million in October of last year. Finally, collections of wills, suits, deeds, and contracts – mainly recordation tax collections – were $28.9 million in October, compared with $26.4 million in October of last year for growth of 9.5%. Following 13 consecutive months of negative growth, October marked the second consecutive monthly increase in this source.

On a year-to-date basis, collections of payroll withholding taxes – 64% of General Fund revenues -- increased 5.5%, ahead of the revised annual forecast of 2.7% growth. Year-to-date nonwithholding collections increased by 14.2% and ahead of the annual estimate of 6.3% growth. Sales tax collections – 19% of General Fund revenues – increased 3.8% through October, ahead of the annual forecast calling for a 4.4% increase. Through the first four months of the fiscal year, corporate income tax collections have grown 16.6% from the same period last year, ahead of the annual estimate of a 0.9% decline.


Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Virginia Congressman Rob Wittman's Weekly Address, April 15th, 2014

English:
English: (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Although Mother Nature has not quite decided, the calendar tells us spring is here. We welcome the hope of warmer weather, a chance to put away those winter coats, and plan a trip to the park with the children or grandchildren. And as the season changes to warm, welcoming weather, along comes a day and topic that, to some, may not be so welcoming: Tax Day.

Every year, April brings the deadline to file your tax return. Many Virginians have completed their paperwork and sent off a check to the federal government. But do you question where your money is allocated? Do you wonder if the IRS is being fair and impartial to each taxpayer? Do you believe that Washington spends your money wisely and with prudence?

Like many Americans, I believe government spending is out-of-control. We have lost faith in institutions such as the IRS as we listen to testimony of citizens citing solid proof of the targeting of certain groups based upon their beliefs. Like many Americans, I believe taxpayers deserve better, and they deserve a simpler, fairer tax code.  According to the non-partisan Tax Foundation, hard working taxpayers across Virginia worked from January 1, 2013 until April 20, 2013, to pay their share of taxes for the year before they began working for themselves. Some are struggling and sacrificing to provide for their families. We must encourage Washington to do better.

That’s why I support legislation to reform federal spending, such as the Balanced Budget Amendment, to ensure Washington doesn’t spend more than it brings in. I have cosponsored H.R. 1950, which would make it a crime for IRS employees to conduct targeted discrimination and would increase the maximum penalty for discriminatory misconduct against taxpayers from termination to criminal punishment. And I support the Fair Tax Act, which would repeal the income tax and employment tax, as well as the estate and gift tax, and replace them with a sales tax on goods and services purchased in the United States. The rate of this sales tax would be consistent across the country for every citizen.

Our nation was founded on the ideas of a representative government that works for its citizens. As I talk to folks across the First District, they support an efficient, fair government that does its job. With some hard work, I believe we can get there.
The main streets of Virginia’s First District are full of ideas to get our economy back on track, and your feedback is critically important to me as I serve you. I can be reached by telephone at (202) 225-4261, through my website (www.wittman.house.gov), on Facebook (www.facebook.com/reprobwittman), and via Twitter (www.twitter.com/robwittman).
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