How the mighty have fallen. The latest Census Bureau data show the Empire State’s population drain continues, as people flee New York in droves.
From July 2021 to July 2022, 300,000 more people moved out of the state than moved in. New York had the largest population loss — in both percentage and absolute terms — experienced by any state during that period.
Sadly, this was both predictable and preventable.
In March 2021, a study of New York found that its already staggeringly high tax burden had worsened due to an increase in the top marginal tax rate to almost 15% for those in New York City. The study projected that the flood of people leaving would only accelerate — and it did.
Even before that study, the Empire State lost so many people that it cost New York a seat in Congress after the 2020 Census. This exodus is a direct response to New York’s obscenely high taxes.
ust how bad is it? Compared with other states, New Yorkers:
• Pay the highest total tax burden and highest share of personal income (14%) in taxes.
• Endure the second-worst overall business tax climate.
• Face the highest individual income tax rate and income tax collections per capita.
• Pay the second-highest state and local corporate income tax collections per capita.
• Have the fourth-highest property taxes and local sales tax rate (on average),
• Pay the highest cigarette taxes and ninth-highest gasoline taxes.
• Pay the sixth-highest capital-stock tax rate.
• Are tied for third-highest estate tax rate.
And what do New Yorkers get for all these taxes? Roads smooth as glass? The best airports in the world? Trains running on time? Bulletproof electric grid and water infrastructure? Ample police to maintain safety and order?
Not even close.
Instead, New York City residents face some of the highest crime rates in the world, thanks to soft-on-crime policies from liberal politicians. And people everywhere across the state are threatened by a looming municipal debt crisis. Notwithstanding its sky’s-the-limit tax policies, New York has accumulated the highest state and local debt per capita in the nation.
And the future is not bright. When people flee the state, they take their jobs and money with them. That hamstrings future revenue collection for a state that has never learned to spend within its means. But the days of being rescued by tycoons like J.P. Morgan are long gone. Absent a federal bailout, both New York state and New York City are on a collision course with first grade mathematics — and bankruptcy.
Sadly, too many New York politicians seem to have learned nothing from their repeated failures and instead are pursuing more of the same, reminiscent of the famous maxim about insanity. The Empire State’s tax on gasoline just rose 16 cents per gallon on Jan. 1 — an apropos way for the nation’s highest-tax state to ring in the new year.