PHOENIX — Arizona lawmakers voted Tuesday against reviewing the various state sales-tax exemptions granted over the years.
Sen. Steve Farley, D-Tucson, who proposed the review, said some of the exemptions probably have merit, but legislators won’t know unless they take a closer look.
Figures obtained by Capitol Media Services show if every transaction were subject to the state’s 5.6 percent sales tax, the state would collect at least $12.2 billion a year. That compares with $4.2 billion collected in the last budget year.
Some of the exemptions are based on policy.
For example, Arizona has decided to tax only a final purchase. That compares with the European system of “value-added” taxes, where every transaction is taxed each time a product or service changes hands. That exemption equals $4.1 billion.
People are also reading…
Others were enacted for political reasons, including the decision not to tax food purchased at grocery stores for home consumption, sales that the Department of Revenue say would add $414 million in taxes.
Services also generally are exempt, including nearly $2 billion that would otherwise be collected from medical and hospital services, plus another $440 million if the state taxed prescriptions and medical oxygen. Plus, there is another $1 billion in professional, scientific and technical services.
Some of the other sales-tax exemptions calculated by the Department of Revenue include:
- Items shipped out of state — $49.4 million
- Livestock and poultry feed — $10.5 million
- Machinery used in manufacturing, printing, refining — $44.7 million
- Solar energy devices — $18.7 million
- Lottery tickets — $37.5 million
- Warranty and service contracts — $15.7 million
- Textbooks required by state universities or community colleges — $502,600
- Pipes or valves 4 inches in diameter to transport oil, natural gas, coal slurry — $1.5 million
- Railroad cars, rails, ties — $273,500
- Machinery used in research and development — $2.2 million
- Leasing a mobile home for more than 29 days — $550,800
On Twitter: @azcapmedia