Restaurant Trade Association Urges Nevada to Reject Alcohol Tax Hike
American Beverage Institute Says Alcohol Taxes are Regressive and Cost JobsMarch 17, 2009
WASHINGTON – Today the American Beverage Institute (ABI), which represents hundreds of American restaurants, denounced alcohol tax hike bill AB277 which is being heard today in the Assembly Taxation Committee today at 1:30pm. Increasing alcohol taxes costs jobs and disproportionally hurts those who are least able to pay them.
“For brewers, distillers, wholesalers, and retailers that have already been under severe strain in this recession, raising beverage taxes will send hundreds of Nevadans straight to the unemployment line,” said ABI Managing Director Sarah Longwell.
According to the Tax Foundation, individuals earning less than $20,000 per year face federal alcohol tax burdens that are more than 18 times higher than individuals making in excess of $200,000. Not only are hospitality taxes on alcohol regressive, they also contribute to job loss: after the federal government doubled the beer tax in 1991, approximately 60,000 Americans in the brewing, distributing, and retailing industries lost their jobs from a shrunken industry.
“Beverage alcohol is already one of the highest taxed consumer products in the United States. Too often, hospitality taxes are treated like an ATM to generate extra revenue to make up for wasteful government spending,” said Longwell. She continued, “as Americans struggle through tough economic conditions, Nevada could not pick a worse time to increase taxes.”