Most agree that eliminating the corporate income tax in NC is a bad idea
Published February 16, 2023
Reaching consensus on anything these days seems like something out of a fairy tale. Families have fallen out over what you can do during the national anthem, student loan forgiveness has the generations at each other’s throats, and of course the vinegar/ketchup barbeque debate rages on.
Turns out we can agree after all. As we take stock of things we cherish on Valentine’s Day, corporate income taxes count among the most beloved policies we have.
North Carolinians' responses to whether eliminating the corporate income tax is an effective economic path
A recent poll showed that North Carolinians — of all political stripes, races, ages, genders, and even parts of the state — are stone-cold opposed to eliminating the corporate income tax.
Perhaps most strikingly, support for the corporate income tax is one thing conservatives and liberals, and Biden and Trump voters, see eye to eye on. Nearly 70 percent of conservative North Carolinians think eliminating the corporate income tax is ineffective economic policy, only a little lower than the 85 percent of liberals (the answers were nearly identical for Biden and Trump voters respectively).
Opposition to eliminating the corporate income tax dominates across every other group surveyed, including:
- 79 percent of women and 75 percent of men
- 78 percent of rural, 76 percent of suburban, and 81 percent of urban residents
- 71 percent of Black and 80 percent of white North Carolinians
- 80 percent of people between 18 and 34 years old and the same share of people over 50
The level of skepticism about eliminating the corporate income tax is even more striking in comparison to what North Carolinians think we should be investing in. When asked what we should do with the billions of dollars the state has sitting on the sidelines, people had a long list of priorities that came ahead of giving the money to corporations.
While only a quarter of respondents thought we should divert public funds into corporate coffers, at least 80 percent believe we need to pay our teachers better, provide affordable child care and work force training, build affordable housing, and invest in our schools, water infrastructure, and broadband.
In spite of how massively unpopular it is, legislative leaders still have us on a path to eliminate the corporate income tax, and some have even floated the idea of making it happen faster. That means the voices behind the results we saw in this poll need to be heard in Raleigh. Legislators need to hear the depth of displeasure that North Carolinians feel about giving our money to already wealthy companies. Let’s make good on an area where genuine consensus exists and make sure that wealthy corporations pay what they owe.