2024 Business Tax Rankings: Minnesota Fails Again | NFIB

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Minnesota’s business tax climate ranks in bottom 10 – again.

While Governor Walz touted Minnesota’s fourth place ranking in CNBC’s best states for business earlier this year, the nonpartisan Tax Foundation published a sobering reminder that Minnesota remains an expensive place to do business.

In the latest edition of the Tax Foundation’s State Business Tax Climate Index, Minnesota ranks 44th – sixth from the bottom. This continues a decade-plus trend of Minnesota ranking in the bottom ten states for business tax climate.

 

 

This session, Minnesota Democrats – who have complete control of state government – went on a spending spree. Fueled by a massive $18 billion budget surplus, Governor Walz and DFLers in the Minnesota Legislature increased state spending by nearly 40% and raised taxes by another $10 billion over the next years.

Meanwhile, neighboring states have taken a different approach.

In Iowa, where Republicans hold the governor’s office and state legislature, lawmakers have dramatically reduced taxes on corporate, individual, and retirement income. As a result, Iowa has pulled itself out of the bottom ten in the Business Tax Climate Index and is steadily moving up the ladder as tax reductions take effect.

Divided government in Wisconsin has produced less dramatic results than Iowa but the state’s ranking has continued to improve over the past decade.

The Tax Foundation analysis is based on objective metrics, including corporate and individual tax rates, sales taxes, property taxes, and unemployment insurance taxes. Minnesota ranks in the bottom half of states in every category.

CNBC’s Top States for Business rankings include non-business and subjective factors such as voting rights, worker protections, and social issues. Objective business factors like the cost of doing business and business friendliness are given less weight than these subjective factors.

 



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