News & Updates

Metro Area Gets Most from State Business Tax Repeal

by | Mar 9, 2016 | Economy, Taxes

Proponents of the elimination of the state business property tax have touted the tax relief that will flow to greater Minnesota businesses. However, the vast majority of the relief will flow to the seven-county metropolitan area, with over a third going to Hennepin County alone.

This article is part of a continuing series which examines the proposal to eliminate the state business property tax. Part 1 examined the distribution of tax relief between high value versus low value businesses. Part 2 addressed the question of whether—given the projected size of the state budget surplus—Minnesota could afford to forego the revenue generated by the state business property tax. This third installment will examine the regional distribution of tax reductions resulting from the elimination of the tax.

For taxes payable in 2016, the State of Minnesota will collect just over $800 million through the state business property tax. The statewide amount of the property tax increases each year based on the rate of inflation. By 2022—the year in which the phase-out of the state business property tax will be complete under some proposals—the state is projected to generate over $900 million through the state business property tax. The graph below shows the regional distribution of tax relief resulting from the elimination of the state business property tax based on data for the most current year available (assessment year 2015, corresponding to tax payable year 2016).

BizPropertyTax

Approximately one-third of the tax relief from the repeal of the state business property tax will go Hennepin County, while another third will go the remaining six metropolitan counties (Anoka, Carver, Dakota, Ramsey, Scott, and Washington). With 45 percent of the state’s population, the eight counties comprising greater Minnesota would get 34 percent of the statewide property tax relief resulting from the elimination of the state business property tax.

The table below shows the per capita property tax relief resulting from the elimination of the state business property tax for each of Minnesota’s 13 regions* based on data for tax payable year 2016. The average relief statewide would be $149 per capita. Of the thirteen regions, only the seven county metropolitan area would receive per capita tax relief ($180 per capita) above the statewide average. Each of the twelve greater Minnesota regions receive per capita tax relief below the statewide average, ranging from a high of $145 per capita in northwest Minnesota to a low of $60 per capita in east central Minnesota.

Based on Pay 2016 Tax Data Estimated Population Estimated Tax Relief from Elimination of State C/I Property Tax
Region Amount Per Cap.
Northwest Minnesota          85,878 $12,431,421 $145
Northern Minnesota          84,584 $11,279,427 $133
Northeast Minnesota        326,761 $39,272,265 $120
Western Minnesota        225,505 $23,144,345 $103
North Central Minnesota        162,834 $16,343,421 $100
South Central Minnesota        116,389 $11,721,695 $101
West Central Minnesota          43,758 $4,707,543 $108
East Central Minnesota        163,555 $9,781,737 $60
Central Minnesota        414,013 $48,222,196 $116
Southwest Minnesota        117,946 $15,433,757 $131
Southern Minnesota        231,686 $26,670,087 $115
Southeast Minnesota        500,966 $59,325,557 $118
Seven County Metro    2,979,343 $535,666,550 $180
State Total    5,453,218 $814,000,000 $149

If we group all of greater Minnesota together, the level of tax relief resulting from the repeal of the state business property tax amounts to $113 per capita, less than two-thirds of the level of per capita relief in the seven county metro.

It is accurate to say that some of the tax relief resulting from the repeal of the state business property tax will go to greater Minnesota. It is not accurate to imply that the elimination of the state business property tax is in any way tax relief that is especially targeted to greater Minnesota. In terms of overall tax relief as well as on a per capita basis, the preponderance of tax relief resulting from the repeal of the state business property tax goes to the metropolitan area.

*The thirteen regions here are based on a Department of Revenue classification as used in state abstracts. The counties comprising each region are listed below.

Northwest Minnesota: Kittson, Marshall, Norman, Pennington, Polk, Red Lake, and Roseau counties; Northern Minnesota: Beltrami, Clearwater, Hubbard, Lake of the Woods, and Mahnomen counties; Northeast Minnesota: Aitkin, Carlton, Cook, Itasca, Koochiching, Lake, and Saint Louis counties; Western Minnesota: Becker, Clay, Douglas, Grant, Otter Tail, Pope, Stevens, Traverse, and Wilkin counties; North Central Minnesota: Cass, Crow Wing, Morrison, Todd, and Wadena counties; South Central Minnesota: Kandiyohi, McLeod, Meeker, and Renville counties; West Central Minnesota: Big Stone, Chippewa, Lac Qui Parle, Swift, and Yellow Medicine counties; East Central Minnesota: Chisago, Isanti, Kanabec, Mille Lacs, and Pine counties; Central Minnesota: Benton, Sherburne, Stearns, and Wright counties; Southwest Minnesota: Cottonwood, Jackson, Lincoln, Lyon, Murray, Nobles, Pipestone, Redwood, and Rock counties; Southern Minnesota: Blue Earth, Brown, Faribault, LeSueur, Martin, Nicollet, Sibley, Waseca, and Watonwan counties; Southeast Minnesota: Dodge, Fillmore, Freeborn, Goodhue, Houston, Mower, Olmsted, Rice, Steele, Wabasha, and Winona counties; Seven County Metro: Anoka, Carver, Dakota, Hennepin, Ramsey, Scott, and Washington counties.

Failure is Not an Option

Despite Minnesota having $12.5 billion in one time money and a structural general fund surplus of $6 billion, there is no surplus in transportation funding. This report details decades of declining revenue from dedicated funding sources of transportation...

Underfunded Minnesota: Collective Investment for a Brighter Future

The current budget surplus represents an important opportunity to improve the quality and affordability of life for Minnesotans. For decades, wages have largely stagnated, while workers and families have incurred steeply rising costs for major expenses like childcare,...

Losing Ground: State Disinvestment in Students

Our first report, “Losing Ground”, has a simple but stark finding: over the last twenty years, per pupil state aid received by Minnesota school districts declined by 20 percent, after adjusting for inflation. As state aid has fallen off, school districts have asked...

Contact Us

Use this form to get in touch with North Star staff, or send your questions, suggestions, and ideas to staff@northstarpolicy.org.