• About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
Thursday, May 8, 2025
The Iowa Torch
  • Home
  • State Government
  • Federal Government
  • Local Government
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • State Government
  • Federal Government
  • Local Government
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Opinion
The Iowa Torch
The Iowa Torch
No Result
View All Result
Home Opinion

Hendrickson: Hands off! Taxpayer Relief Fund belongs to the taxpayers

John Hendrickson: Taxpayer Relief Fund money belongs to the taxpayer and must be used for further income tax relief and not additional spending.

John HendricksonbyJohn Hendrickson
March 7, 2023
in Opinion
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Iowa House approves 2.5 percent funding increase for school districts

While some proposals want to fund more spending, a bill has been introduced in the Senate to utilize the Taxpayer Relief Fund to phase-out the income tax altogether.

RELATED POSTS

Feenstra: Lowering the cost of childcare for our families

Grassley: History informs farm policies of today

Hendrickson: Iowa taxpayers win big in 2024

“Keep your eye on one thing and one thing only: how much government is spending, because that’s the true tax,” the late economist Milton Friedman once stated. Paying out public dollars is the heart of high taxation, regardless of the tax. This lesson has taken hold in Iowa, where pro-growth tax reforms and conservative budgeting by Governor Kim Reynolds and the legislature have resulted in multiyear budget surpluses as well as a growing balance in the Taxpayer Relief Fund. That fund represents excess tax dollars collected by the government, but not spent.

The Taxpayer Relief Fund originated in 2011 as the Taxpayer Trust Fund, which the legislature enacted to capture excess revenue for income tax relief. Lawmakers at the time believed it to be the best way to ensure surplus tax collections ended up back in the pockets of taxpayers, not used for more state-level spending. With the fund originally capped at $60 million, Iowans received credits on their state tax returns each year there was a balance.

A 2018 tax reform law renamed the Taxpayer Trust Fund as the Taxpayer Relief Fund and removed the $60 million cap. Additionally, taxpayers no longer received an automatic return of the excess revenue; rather, the legislature is now tasked with returning those dollars through tax relief measures of its choosing.

Tax dollars only flow into the Taxpayer Relief Fund after the state’s Cash Reserve Fund and Economic Emergency Fund (Iowa’s “Rainy Day Funds”) are both filled to their statutory requirements. Notably, both have achieved that level, holding a combined $895 million, which is projected to increase to $962 million by fiscal year 2024.

Despite these prior requirements, the Taxpayer Relief Fund has grown from $1.6 billion in fiscal year 2022 to $2.7 billion in fiscal year 2023. Projections for fiscal year 2024 show the Taxpayer Relief Fund will increase to $3.4 billion by that time.

The fund continues to increase thanks to Iowa’s strong economy and the fact state government is still collecting too much money from taxpayers, even in spite of multiple rounds of tax cuts being phased in. A 2022 tax reform law is the biggest step yet in correcting this excess through a flat 3.9 percent income tax rate implemented by 2026.

The enormous balance in the Taxpayer Relief Fund should remind policymakers of its original intent: to provide Iowans with income tax relief. Senator Dan Dawson, who Chairs the Ways and Means Committee, is working to ensure the Taxpayer Relief Fund is used for its intended purpose. Doing so requires not only further income tax relief, but also safeguarding the fund.

ADVERTISEMENT

To meet both objectives, Senator Dawson has introduced a bill that, if enacted, would accelerate the rate reductions from the 2022 tax reform law. The legislation would lower the individual income tax to a flat 4 percent in 2025 and 3.9 percent in 2026. By 2027, the rate would fall to 2.95 percent, and by 2028, it would reach 2.5 percent. Once the 2.5 percent flat rate is implemented, the individual income tax would phase down until it is completely eliminated. Senator Dawson’s plan does this by utilizing money in the Taxpayer Relief Fund, renaming it, again, as the Individual Income Tax Elimination Fund.

Such large balances in the Taxpayer Relief Fund also bring competing temptations for additional government spending.   Indeed, some legislators recently offered an amendment to a property tax bill that would have used the Taxpayer Relief Fund to provide backfill payments to cities and counties.  Another bill introduced last month proposed a similar use of Taxpayer Relief Fund dollars by creating local government supplement payments.

The desire to grow city, county, and state budgets, whether under the guise of “buying down” property taxes or simply adding spending within the state General Fund, will remain constant. Taxpayer Relief Fund money belongs to the taxpayer and must be used for further income tax relief and not additional spending.

Tags: individual income taxIowa state budgetMilton Friedmantax reformTaxpayer Relief Fund
ShareTweetShare
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Taxpayers to pay $2 million of UI’s settlement in racial discrimination lawsuit

Next Post

Feenstra: Our trade deficit threatens our economic security

John Hendrickson

John Hendrickson

John Hendrickson is the Policy Director for ITR Foundation.

Related Posts

brown and green concrete high rise building
Opinion

Hendrickson: Iowa taxpayers deserve constitutional protection

April 12, 2024
Iowa House approves 2.5 percent funding increase for school districts
Opinion

Hendrickson: State spending will determine future tax relief

April 8, 2024
Opinion

Hendrickson: The path remains clear for more tax reform

March 26, 2024
Reynolds signs bill phasing in 3.9 percent flat tax
Opinion

Hendrickson: Reynolds wants more tax cuts

September 28, 2023
State Government

Reynolds announces a state budget surplus of $1.83 Billion

September 28, 2023
Opinion

Hendrickson: Why the Taxpayer Relief Fund needs constitutional protection

August 16, 2023
Next Post

Feenstra: Our trade deficit threatens our economic security

President Joe Biden speaks at POET Bioprocessing in Menlo, Iowa.

Ernst: Biden is trying to make your 401(k) broke and woke.

Recommended Articles

Grassley: Medicare, Iowans’ Healthcare, and the COVID-19 Pandemic

Grassley: Medicare, Iowans’ Healthcare, and the COVID-19 Pandemic

December 7, 2020
Unemployed, Injured Workers Will See Increase in State Benefits

Unemployed, Injured Workers Will See Increase in State Benefits

July 7, 2021
Grassley Questions Attorney General Garland Over School Board Violence Memo

Grassley wins re-election, Iowa Republicans sweep U.S. House races

November 9, 2022

Popular Stories

  • Three LGTBQ Books with Sexually Explicit Material Pulled from Waukee School

    Three LGTBQ Books with Sexually Explicit Material Pulled from Waukee School

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Editorial: Johnston School Board can’t legally deny a TPUSA chapter

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Hendrickson: John Calvin’s contribution to liberty

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Rozenboom: Reflecting on the First Week of the 2021 Legislative Session

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Reynolds Appoints Joshua Schier as District Court Judge

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
The Iowa Torch

The Iowa Torch​ is a for-profit, news organization that focuses on political news as it relates to Iowans

Categories

  • Current Events
  • Education
  • Federal Government
  • Iowa History
  • Local Government
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • State Government

Newsletter

© 2022 The Iowa Torch, a publication of 4:15 Communications, LLC.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • State Government
  • Federal Government
  • Local Government
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Opinion

© 2022 The Iowa Torch, a publication of 4:15 Communications, LLC.