
A sweet deal? Massachusetts moves to tax candy
And if it is a good idea, well, what's the logic in stopping there? What about other sugary products, like some types of cereal and breakfast bars, that are practically candy in disguise? For that matter, what about a pound of sugar at a grocery store?
'We think that makes sense,'
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'This isn't about a new tax,' the governor said. 'What this is doing is simply saying, when you go to the grocery store, instead of having candy treated like a purchase of bread and eggs and milk – you know, essential groceries – that candy is now going to be treated in the same way as when you go to the bakery in the back of the grocery store and pick up cupcakes for your kids.'
But defining what qualifies as candy isn't as straightforward as you'd think. Legally, it's a sticky situation. 'You see states drawing an administrable line,'
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Massachusetts, however, takes a broader approach.
Holderness argues that all these complications are why he generally favors a very broad-based sales tax. 'Once you introduce exemptions, that's where all these problems come into being,' Holderness told me. 'If you're going to do that then you also need accompanying assistance for lower-income individuals who are bearing the regressive nature of the tax.'
Those regressive effects are a reason to think twice about the whole idea, especially given the tiny amount of money it will bring in in the context of the state's $62 billion budget.
'What is $25 million bringing to the table' Viviana Abreu-Hernández, the president of the
Taxing candy, Abreu-Hernández said, 'is going to be a regressive tax, because poor people are going to have to pay more for candy than rich people based on the percentage of their income that goes into that tax. We want taxes to be fair.'
It's why Abreu-Hernández's organization has been constantly pushing for the state to eliminate a different, far more generous tax exemption — the one on the sales of private jets and helicopters, which MassBudget called a '
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'In our analysis, if you tax aircraft and aircraft parts, you will bring in $27.6 million' in state revenue, she said. That's more revenue than taxing candy while targeting a much smaller, much wealthier group of people.
Perhaps not surprisingly, Big Candy opposes making candy a taxable item. A spokesperson for the
So, Massachusetts lawmakers have a choice: Do they tax the kid buying a Snickers at the corner store, or the executive flying a private jet to Nantucket?
This is an excerpt from
, a Globe Opinion newsletter from columnist Marcela García.
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Marcela García is a Globe columnist. She can be reached at
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