Press Release

Over Three Dozen Leading New Jersey Organizations Ask the Legislature for Small-Business Tax Fairness by Closing Corporate Tax Loopholes


This letter sends a strong message to New Jersey’s lawmakers: the time to close corporate loopholes is now.

Published on May 4, 2016 in Tax and Budget

Over Three Dozen Leading New Jersey Organizations Ask the Legislature for Small-Business Tax Fairness by Closing Corporate Tax Loopholes
‘Combined reporting,’ a common practice in other states, would also provide resources needed to grow the economy and meet the state’s growing needs

Thirty-seven New Jersey organizations representing hundreds of thousands of state residents are today sending a letter to the state legislature asking lawmakers to promote tax fairness for small, local businesses by closing corporate tax loopholes.

The letter, signed by a spectrum of community, labor, faith, environmental and social justice groups, shows widespread and deep support for what’s known as “combined reporting.” This treats the parent company and subsidiaries of multistate corporations as one entity for state corporate income tax purposes. Their nationwide profits are added together and the state then taxes the appropriate share of the combined income.

combined reporting mapWith recent enactment in Rhode Island and Connecticut, 25 out of the 45 states that have some form of corporate income taxation, plus the District of Columbia, now mandate combined reporting. In fact, this important reform has become so commonplace in other states that nearly all of New Jersey’s largest employers already use it when filing state taxes elsewhere, according to research by New Jersey Policy Perspective (NJPP), which has led recent efforts to enact combined reporting in New Jersey.

“This letter sends a strong message to New Jersey’s lawmakers: the time to close corporate loopholes is now,” said NJPP Deputy Director Jon Whiten. “The track record from across the nation is abundantly clear: this common-sense reform would help level the playing field for small and local businesses and raise significant new resources that New Jersey could invest in the building blocks of a strong state economy.”

A comprehensive bill to require combined reporting – as introduced by Senators Lesniak, Sarlo and Greenstein and Assembly members Holley, Eustace and McKnight – would raise up to $290 million a year in new corporate business tax revenue, according to the Office of Legislative Services. This shot in the arm is particularly timely, given that corporate tax revenues are flat at best as a result of New Jersey’s recent surge in tax subsidies.

The letter will be sent to all members of the legislature today.

Signers:

American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees – Council 1

American Federation of Teachers – New Jersey

The Anti-Poverty Network of New Jersey

BlueWave New Jersey

Clean Water Action

Communications Workers of America – New Jersey

Communications Workers of America – Local 1032

Communications Workers of America – Local 1037

Communications Workers of America – Local 1081

Council of New Jersey State College Locals

Drug Policy Alliance

Environment New Jersey

Greater New Jersey Pride at Work

Health Professionals and Allied Employees

Housing and Community Development Network of New Jersey

Ironbound Community Corporation

Latino Action Network

Lutheran Episcopal Advocacy Ministry of New Jersey

The Main Street Alliance of New Jersey

Monarch Housing Associates

National Association of Social Workers – New Jersey

New Jersey Citizen Action

New Jersey Communities United

New Jersey Education Association

New Jersey Policy Perspective

New Jersey Public Interest Research Group

New Jersey Sierra Club

New Jersey State AFL-CIO

New Jersey Tenants Organization

New Jersey Work Environment Council

New Jersey Working Families

SEIU – New Jersey State Council

SEIU – 32 BJ

SEIU – Local 617

SEIU – Workers United

SEIU – Local 518

Unitarian Universalist Legislative Ministry of New Jersey