18-06-2025
Healey opened the door to tweaking the ‘millionaires tax.' Now what?
Jim Stergios — executive director of the right-leaning Pioneer Institute that opposed the millionaires tax — was
thisclose
to issuing a press release praising Healey. Then reality set in.
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
The next day the governor — who as a then-candidate
supported the Fair Share Amendment ballot initiative that created the millionaires tax — clarified her thoughts, telling
Advertisement
Now if you were in the audience, as I was, Healey came across as someone who has been getting an earful from business leaders about the impact of the tax — hearing
that entrepreneurs might not want to start their businesses here, companies are having a hard time recruiting senior executives, and wealthy individuals are uprooting to Florida, New Hampshire, and other states without income taxes.
Advertisement
And while Healey did not give a full-throttled rejection of the millionaires tax, she
was doing what any good leader should do: Listen, take notes, and review what's not working.
'I'm going to look at ways to lower costs, including what other tax reforms are necessary,' she said. 'I want Massachusetts to be a place where people are attracted to come and grow, and make money and succeed and do well. So I think we need to be open to that, to be open to looking at what we need to do within our existing tax regime that will make us more conducive to that.'
Hundreds of attendees gathered both in-person and online for the Globe Tech Innovation Summit in Boston last week.
Michael Manning Photography
Anyone who has followed the millionaires tax debate
knows that, for the business community, this is what counts as a victory, after
And during the seven-year push to get the millionaires tax on the ballot, its pros and cons have been well litigated, both
in court and in the court of public opinion. Voters approved the tax because they want better schools and a functioning T, and now that billions of dollars in new tax
money is flowing, it's hard to see Beacon Hill giving it up. Nothing gives
But what the opposition is saying now is that an idea that was
conceived before the pandemic feels more ill-conceived today.
'We need to recognize that the millionaires tax was a concept that was put forward in far different economic time,' said Jay Ash, CEO of the Massachusetts Competitive Partnership, whose business group opposed the tax. 'COVID made the world much smaller ... now everyone can operate from anywhere.'
Advertisement
Employees and companies have choices they may not have a few years ago. Between the high cost of doing business and a
I don't see business leaders marching in the streets demanding a repeal of the millionaires tax. They're smarter than that. Rather, they're playing the long game:
Here's
Had the Massachusetts private sector created 250,000 jobs during that period like North Carolina did, we would have generated an additional $1.3 billion in state income and sales tax revenue, according to Pioneer Institute analysis.
John T. C. Lee, CEO of MKS Inc. and chair of the Massachusetts High Technology Council, says he knows a few people who've moved away to avoid the millionaires tax. He's also seen the surtax hurt recruiting, with a couple of job candidates deciding not to work at MKS, an Andover company that supplies equipment and components to computer chip makers.
Advertisement
'Whether it's revisiting, repealing, whatever, I think it is worth looking at the data,' said Lee. 'The best thing is that we look at the facts, and the facts steer us towards one direction or another.'
The Fair Share Amendment ballot initiative created the millionaires tax. 52 percent of voters approved the tax by a clear margin in 2022.
Pat Greenhouse/Globe Staff
Data will be key, and so far it's all too early to weigh the benefits of the millionaires tax against the costs,
Meanwhile, any effort to repeal the tax would take years, requiring an amendment to the state constitution and votes by two successive Legislatures, followed by a citizen ballot question. And it would clearly draw a fight from powerful labor groups, who outspent the business community the first time around.
Another option: lower the base income tax rate for everyone to something below 5 percent. That'd be a tough sell to Beacon Hill because income taxes are the primary source of revenue for the state budget.
The bottom line: Repealing the millionaires tax isn't on the table yet, but make no mistake the push to chip away at it has already begun.
Shirley Leung is a Business columnist and host of the Globe Opinion podcast 'Say More with Shirley Leung.' Find the podcast on
,
, and
. Follow her on Threads
Advertisement
Shirley Leung is a Business columnist. She can be reached at