Who pays taxes in North Carolina?
North Carolina has an "upside down" or regressive tax code, meaning the people with the lowest income pay the greatest portion of their incomes in state and local taxes. Read More
North Carolina has an "upside down" or regressive tax code, meaning the people with the lowest income pay the greatest portion of their incomes in state and local taxes. Read More
North Carolina is a wealthy state that can come together to do better for our children and all of our future. Read More
Office of State Budget & Management and the Fiscal Research Division show that the loss to public funds from corporate and personal income tax cuts when in full effect would be between $13.7 and $15.2 billion. Read More
North Carolina is on a path of zero income tax, but not zero poverty. Read More
North Carolina requires local governments to fund election administration and the level of funding but that funding has averaged less than 1 percent of county budgets. Read More
Tax cuts are not the remedy for what is ailing North Carolina. We need to invest in a more just recovery. Read More
North Carolina's tax policy is not race neutral according to a new report from the NC Budget and Tax Center. Read More
State dollars alone won't get us to the North Carolina we could be. Federal dollars are needed to meet the scale of hardship and priority investments. Read More