Brad Keithley’s Chart of the Week: The Legislature to Alaska families – The less you make, the more we take

One of the things that disappoints most about the Alaska media is its ongoing failure to report on – or even reference – the hugely regressive impact of using cuts in the Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD) to fund state government. The regressive approach the Legislature has used since 2016 to fund state government can be summarized by the mantra some observers use to describe it, usually in hushed tones – “the less you make, the more we take.”

It’s not that there isn’t source material that the media can use. Both the 2016 study for the then-administration of former Governor Bill Walker by researchers at the University of Alaska-Anchorage’s (UAA) Institute of Social and Economic Research (ISER) and the 2017 study for the then-Legislature by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP) provide detailed analyses of the highly disproportionate impact on middle and lower-income – which together are 80% of – Alaska families that results from using PFD cuts to fund Alaska government.

For those who claim that’s old news, just last year, ISER Professor Matthew Berman, one of the authors of the 2016 ISER study and still on the faculty at UAA, made clear that the impact remains as regressive as ever. In an opinion piece in the Anchorage Daily News, Berman reiterated the points made in the 2016 ISER and other subsequent studies:

A cut in the PFD is a tax — the most regressive tax ever proposed. A $1,000 cut will push thousands of Alaska families below the poverty line. It will increase homelessness and food insecurity.

The two most relevant times to remind Alaskans of the impact of using PFD cuts to fund state government compared to the alternatives are each Spring as the Legislature develops the state budget, when the cuts are being made, and each Fall when the reduced PFD is distributed to Alaskans, when the cuts hit home. For the past several years, however, the media has done neither, leaving Alaskans repeatedly in the dark about one of the most – if not for many families the single most – significant economic decision affecting Alaska household income made annually by the Legislature.

It’s not that the state’s politicians are much better. Unlike as in some past years, this year’s announcement of the per PFD amount by the Dunleavy administration – relegated to a press release by Revenue Commissioner Adam Crum, which doesn’t even appear on the Governor’s website – doesn’t even whisper a mention of the level of the reduction from the current law level. Instead, the press release leads the third paragraph with the misleading claim that “[t]his is the 43rd year Alaskans have received their share of the state’s natural resources and investment earnings;” it fails to mention that this is, instead, the ninth year that the amount set by the Legislature – and signed by Governor Mike Dunleavy (R – Alaska) – has been significantly below Alaskans’share” set by state statute, much less the size of the cut or its hugely regressive impact on Alaska families.

While there may be others, in glancing through various posts from the state’s elected officials, the only one we noticed that even mentioned the cut was a tweet from Senator Bill Wielechowski (D – Anchorage), but in an era where many claim to be concerned about the outmigration of middle and lower-income – working – Alaska families, even that post didn’t focus on the regressive nature of the cut. Others, like those from self-proclaimed PFD defenders Senator Shelly Hughes (R – Palmer) and Representative Sarah Vance (R – Homer), just regurgitate the Dunleavy administration’s press release without noting the deficiency or its impact.

So, as we have done before, we will use one of these columns to address the level of the cut and its impact on Alaskan families by income bracket.

Calculating the level of the PFD cut at the aggregate level is easy. Using data available from the Permanent Fund Corporation’s monthly “History and Projections” report, we (and others) can easily calculate, to use the words of the applicable statute (AS 37.13.140(a)), the gross amount of the “income available for distribution” from the fund. The annual level of the cut is the difference between that and the amount appropriated by the Legislature for distribution, which is easily calculable from the annual appropriations bill.

For dividend (calendar) year 2024, the “income available for distribution” calculated per the statute is $2.34 billion. On the other hand, the amount appropriated by the Legislature, including both the amount being distributed as the PFD and the amount euphemistically described as the “energy relief payment,” totals $1.10 billion. The difference – the amount of the PFD cut – is $1.24 billion, more than half the statutory amount.

As we explained in a previous column, to put that amount in context, PFD cuts alone (adjusted for the final budget numbers) represent about a quarter of overall projected state revenues. For those who like to claim that Alaska is “fiscally conservative,” the cuts – or, to use Professor Berman’s term, the “taxes” – are being used to plug a deficit in the state budget about the same size on a percentage basis, as the deficit in the federal budget.

Calculating the amount of the cut per individual PFD is more complex. As we explained in a previous column, the amount of the individual PFD is calculated first by making some statutory adjustments to the gross amount and then second by dividing the remainder by the number of approved recipients. The size of the adjustments and the number of recipients are published by the Department of Revenue’s (DOR) Permanent Fund Dividend Division (PFD Division) only in arrears, sometimes a couple of years after the fact.

However, pending the publication of the final numbers, we can make a reasonably close approximation for 2024 using a combination of data available from the Legislative Finance Division (LegFin) and the information included by DOR in its announcement. LegFin reported in its July 2024 Newsletter that the amount available for the so-called “Energy Relief” payment is $190.3 million, the full amount conditionally appropriated by the Legislature as part of the overall budget (HB 268, Section 27). For its part, DOR’s announcement reported that the individual energy relief payment is $298.17. Dividing the former by the latter results in a recipient base of roughly 638,225, a larger number than reported by the PFD Division for 2023 but not out of line historically.

Multiplying that recipient base by the individual amount reported by DOR for the PFD ($1,403.83) equals approximately $896.0 million, indicating a net deduction by the PFD Division of approximately $18.3 million in adjustments from the $914.3 million appropriated by the Legislature. Deducting the same amount of adjustments from the gross statutory PFD level and dividing the result by the same number of recipients results in an estimated 2024 statutory PFD of $3,640 and, compared to the $1,702 being distributed, a PFD cut of approximately $1,938.

As the following chart indicates, while lower than some, on a dollar basis, the amount of the 2024 cut ($1,938) is materially higher than the average size of the cuts made over the past nine years ($1,659). On the other hand, the percentage of the cut is about the same. Over the past nine years, PFD cuts have been about 52% of the statutory amount. The 2024 cut is a bit over 53% of the statutory amount. Put another way, the amount paid in 2024, including the so-called “energy relief” payment, totals about 47% of the statutory amount compared to an average of 48% over the full period.

However, that analysis is only the starting point for calculating the impact of the PFD cuts on Alaskan families. As both the 2016 ISER and 2017 ITEP studies emphasized, and as ISER Professor Matthew Berman reiterated in his column last year, at a household level, the impact of the PFD cut is felt through its effect on overall household income. The lower the income, the more the PFD – and therefore the more PFD cuts – matter.

Using the most recent measure of Alaska household income by income level available – the calendar year 2021 income statistics from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) – we have calculated the impact of the 2024 PFD cuts (or, as Professor Berman calls them, the “tax”) by income bracket.

To do that, we start by taking the average Alaska household income reported by the IRS for each income bracket for which it provides data for 2021 and adjusting that to projected 2024 levels using a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 2.5%. Some might argue we should use different escalation factors by income bracket because, in past years, income growth in Alaska’s upper-income brackets has far exceeded that in the lower-income brackets. However, we have forgone that step because it wouldn’t have a material impact over the short time frame for which we use the escalation adjustment.

After that, we calculate the impact by income bracket by increasing the resulting household income by the level of the PFD cut – so that household income reflects what it would have been at a full PFD – then dividing the level of the PFD cut by the resulting household income, reflecting the impact of the cut as a share of household income. In calculating the adjustment, we use the average household size – the number of recipients – in each income bracket calculated from the IRS data. That recognizes that, in Alaska, households at higher income levels tend to be larger – have more recipients – than those at lower income levels.

Here is the result:

Each quartile contains one-quarter – about 81,000 –  of Alaska’s 323,074 households. As the chart shows, within the Top 25% of Alaska households – the quarter of Alaska households with the highest income – the average income at a full PFD is $253,183. Using PFD cuts to fund state government reduces that income by $5,039, or 2.0%.

Using the same breakdown as the IRS, the left columns show the impacts among the Top 10%, Top 5%, and Top 1% of Alaska households. Understandably, as income rises, the impact of using PFD cuts falls. At the average income of the Alaska households with the highest 5% of incomes, for example, PFD cuts to fund state government only reduce income by 0.8%. At the average income of those in the Top 1%, using PFD cuts only reduces income by 0.3%.

The reverse is true, however, as the focus moves down the income scale. For example, within the quarter of Alaska households in the Upper Middle-Income bracket, the average income at a full PFD is $87,497. Because of the smaller household size, using PFD cuts to fund state government only reduces that income by $3,973. However, because of their lower overall income, that still represents 4.5% of total household income.

Again, because of smaller household sizes, using PFD cuts to fund state government only reduces the average income of the quarter of Alaska households falling in the Lower Middle-Income bracket by $3,295. However, because of their lower overall income, that still represents 7% of total household income.

And while the $2,713 reduction in the average income of the quarter of Alaska households falling in the Lowest 25% is lower than in any other bracket, because of their lower overall income, using PFD cuts to fund state government reduces overall income by 14.8%, far more significant than for any other bracket.

In short, as the mantra goes, by using PFD cuts to fund state government, the Legislature is using an approach that takes more as a share of income from Alaska households – indeed, much more – the less the household makes. Again, to reference Professor Berman, the approach is “the most regressive tax ever proposed.”

For context, we also have included on the chart the level of take that would result if all Alaska households contributed the same share of household income toward the costs of state government. That level – 3.6% of household income – is reflected on the chart as a gold dashed line. Using it would raise the same overall amount – $1.24 billion – as using PFD cuts, but in a much more distributionally neutral way. Government action wouldn’t decide winners and losers; all Alaska families would contribute the same.

While using that approach, those in the Top 25% would pay slightly more as a share of income than they do using PFD cuts, the remaining 75% of Alaska families – the 50% in the middle-income brackets and the 25% of those in the lowest bracket – would pay less. Most importantly, unlike as occurs using PFD cuts, no Alaska household would be required to contribute any more toward the cost of state government than any other.

Instead of a mantra of “the less you make, the more we take,” using an average rate approach would result in a mantra of “we take the same share of income to pay for Alaska government from all Alaska families, regardless of whether they are rich, poor, or in between. They all have the same skin in the game. Unlike in the past, we no longer favor the rich over working-class families.”

Alaskans should be aware of the impact of the current approach and options to change it. Alaska’s politicians and the Alaska media should play a significant role in informing them of both.

Brad Keithley is the Managing Director of Alaskans for Sustainable Budgets, a project focused on developing and advocating for economically robust and durable state fiscal policies. You can follow the work of the project on its website, at @AK4SB on Twitter, on its Facebook page or by subscribing to its weekly podcast on Substack.

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Reggie Taylor
8 days ago

“A recent study on basic income, backed by OpenAI founder Sam Altman, shows that giving low-income people guaranteed paydays with no strings attached can lead to their working slightly less, affording them more leisure time………..”
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/sam-altman-universal-basic-income-study-open-research/

Reggie Taylor
8 days ago

“………Nineteen counties in Texas and Illinois tested a UBI program that provided an unconditional $1,000 check every month for three years to a group of lottery-selected individuals. All were between the ages of 21 and 40 and had incomes below 300 percent of the poverty level.
The results aren’t exactly good news for the pro-UBI crowd……….”
https://www.heritage.org/taxes/commentary/universal-basic-income-not-the-panacea-its-advertised

Brad Keithley
8 days ago
Reply to  Reggie Taylor

We don’t view (or defend) the PFD as a UBI. Instead, we focus on what’s the best use of the “free money” from Permanent Fund earnings. It will go somewhere. If not distributed as a PFD, it will go instead into the pockets of the Top 20%, non-residents, and oil companies in the form of continued tax subsidies. While it would benefit them, that use has the “largest adverse impact” of all of the options on the overall Alaska economy and is “by far the costliest” for middle/lower-income – the remaining 80% of – Alaska families. Maybe that’s your preference… Read more »

Reggie Taylor
6 days ago
Reply to  Brad Keithley

Your “view” doesn’t change reality, sir. The PFD is clearly and undeniably documented and analyzed as the best example of UBI on Earth, and that is exactly how you present it in your columns without using (and now denying) the name. Moreover, I’ve already referenced at least four business articles or economic studies in comments to your columns, and there are plenty more out there. 2024 Democratic POTUS candidate Andrew Yang is currently on speaking tours advocating UBI. It is a new and growing socialist sales pitch. In addition to its UBI status, the PFD is an undeniable negative tax.… Read more »

John
8 days ago

Looks like Reggie works for the oil companies, whether he’s paid or not.

Reggie Taylor
7 days ago
Reply to  John

Nope. But I use petroleum products daily, and I want to continue doing so. I also pay taxes right here in Alaska, and I don’t want to pay any more, especially if the state is handing out cash like candy.

John
7 days ago
Reply to  Reggie Taylor

No state taxes, as anyone who actually lives here can tell you.

Tucker
7 days ago
Reply to  John

Along with 8 other states…..

Reggie Taylor
7 days ago
Reply to  John

“No state taxes” does not equal “no taxes”, and “new state taxes” DOES equal “more taxes”.
The PFD IS “free cash”, and it is roundly described (in published and peer reviewed economic papers) as the best example of Universal Basic Income in the world.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_basic_income
https://www.businessinsider.com/universal-basic-income-pros-and-cons
The affect on production has also been well studied:
https://academicworks.cuny.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2015&context=hc_sas_etds

Reggie Taylor
7 days ago
Reply to  John

“No state taxes” does not equal “no taxes”, but “new state taxes” DOES equal “more taxes”. If you “live here” and pay no taxes whatsoever, that in itself might be an interesting conversation………

John
6 days ago
Reply to  Reggie Taylor

The only reason the SoA would even be considering new taxes is because SB21 gutted its revenue stream. No new taxes have actually hit your pocket to date, and you know it. This is the central point that you keep ignoring with all your hysterical whining.

Reggie Taylor
6 days ago
Reply to  John

You continue to focus your ire on the oil industry and ignore my wallet despite my attempts to draw you a picture. I don’t care about the regular, inevitable, cyclical anti-oil and anti-1%er tax bullspit. I’m counting my beans over here. Just this year the Anchorage Assembly increased their two year old gas tax by another $0.12 per gallon, which now makes gas significantly cheaper out here in the Valley than in Anchorage for the first time…….ever. Gas is significantly cheaper in Sunshine (do you know where that is, John?) than in Anchorage. Why? New taxes, that’s why. And the… Read more »

John
6 days ago
Reply to  Reggie Taylor

That’s it? A few cents per gallon gas tax? Man, you must be hanging on by your fingernails. And in case you didn’t know, an Anchorage borough gas tax has nothing to do with the State of Alaska. Keithley writes about statewide issues and you whine about a local gas tax.

Reggie Taylor
6 days ago
Reply to  John

“…….That’s it? A few cents per gallon gas tax?……..’ In case you were unaware, us folks in organized boroughs (like the Anchorage Borough, which became a muni nearly half a century ago…….yeah, I was here) pay property taxes, which far exceed a PFD check…..which, BTY, in economic terms is a negative tax. Yes, I’m hanging on. I don’t drive motor coaches to subsistence hunt, I don’t snowbird, I don’t buy jewelry…….including Alaskan gold. I invest my money like the Permanent Fund is invested. I don’t spend it like a drunken sailor in a brothel. An d I don’t want to… Read more »

John
6 days ago
Reply to  Reggie Taylor

The last thing I remember regarding a connection between borough property taxes and the State of Alaska was 2019, when Dunleavy tried to confiscate all the borough property tax on the pipeline corridor. I know this didn’t affect you MatSu people but all of us on the pipeline corridor were super pissed that local property tax would get whisked down to Juneau to make up for the SB21 shortfall that Dunleavy voted for.

https://www.adn.com/business-economy/energy/2019/02/14/dunleavy-plan-would-shift-400-million-from-municipalities-to-state-ending-local-tax-authority-over-petroleum-property/

Reggie Taylor
6 days ago
Reply to  John

Oh, well maybe you do know how property taxes feel, after all? They feel like……..wait for it……..taxes, don’t they? Did you catch this sentence in your reference?: “………..Senate Bill 57 is part of Dunleavy’s multipronged effort to close a budget shortfall of more than $1.6 billion…….’ Well, $1 billion of that shortfall would equal one PFD year, and that would reduce the pressure on your local taxes, wouldn’t it? And you know what that huge shortfall is all about? The vast majority of the state operating budget is social spending. It’s killing us, and at every level of government. It’s out… Read more »

John
6 days ago
Reply to  Reggie Taylor

Ha ha ha! It’s obvious to me that if the SoA went back to getting real money for Alaskan oil then they’d go back to distributing adequate money to, for instance, local schools and roads and my property tax would go down. I would 100 times rather Conoco paid more so I could pay less than the other way around.

Reggie Taylor
6 days ago
Reply to  John

I would rather anybody pay more so I could pay less, thus, I oppose new or more taxes. If you can get away with increased PPT (for the umpteenth time), have at ‘er. But that isn’t what I’m reading in Mr. Keithley’s columns. Repeatedly citing “the top 1%” (which, upon challenge includes the “top 20%) sounds like an income tax to me (which would then evolve into a sales tax upon further challenge). The bottom line is my wallet.

Reggie Taylor
6 days ago
Reply to  John

“……That’s it? A few cents per gallon gas tax?…….” The Anchorage muni gas tax was just raised $0.12 per gallon. It was $0.10 per gallon. Now it’s $0.22 per gallon. Add the $0.08 state tax (lowered from $0.16 during covid) and the $0.182 federal gas tax. You’re looking at $0.49 per gallon tax in Anchorage. Pump 20 gallons into your car @ $3.45 per gallon, and you’ll pay $69, and $9.80 of that will be taxes. Burn 10 gallons ofbtas per week, and you’ll be paying $255 per year in gas taxes alone. Of course, add PPT taxes to the… Read more »

Justin Michesloff
7 days ago

All of the comments thus far appear to have missed the point. To simplify; the PFD as is codified in Alaskan law is not being administered correctly. The calculation for disbursement is simple and straightforward, more importantly, worked as designed until the socialist Bill Walker wrote superseding legislation to essentially steal half or more of the lawful payout. . As it now stands and due to the bastardization of the PFD rules, Alaskans now receive less than half of their lawful allocation. The balance is essentially stolen by the government and used to float the fiscally irresponsible and bloated government… Read more »

Reggie Taylor
7 days ago

Justin, your comment was accurate and well crafted. But I think you also miss the point, especially as it related to Mr. Keithley’s economic columns where he promotes new taxes while defending the PFD program as a necessary social good. I think it’s also important to here point out that the Permanent Fund Corporation was established by Alaska constitutional amendment. The PFD was not. It was created by statute, just like the statute that later outlined the annual dividend amount. I also agree that the statute amount has not been fulfilled since the disastrous Walker administration, and I will predict… Read more »

John
5 days ago

I would be interested to hear (from Justin) which budget item(s) he thinks suddenly skyrocketed when Walker took office, provoking PFD confiscation. It’s a matter of fact that nothing in particular happened with spending, but revenue took a giant hit. I agree that confiscating a portion of the PFD payout is a crap way for the SoA to deal with a shortfall.

John
4 days ago

I conclude from Justin’s silence that he can’t find evidence of a funding increase. The Alaska budget rolled over, more or less unchanged, only to meet a drastic drop in revenue. Walker happened to be governor at the time but the crisis is entirely due to Parnell and his allies in the Legislature.

Reggie Taylor
3 days ago
Reply to  John

Oil production in Alaska has nearly gone away. They’re producing the bare minimum amount to keep the pipeline from freezing up. Texas is producing over 8x the amount that Alaska is. New Mexico is producing as much as we are. The music is dying, John. The dance is coming to an end. The golden goose has flown south. Continuing to bleed the system will only speed up the inevitable.

John
3 days ago
Reply to  John

Yep. Reggie’s bought and paid for.

John
3 days ago
Reply to  John

Reggie wasn’t asked about a budget item that broke the bank, but it’s obvious that he can’t think one either.

Reggie Taylor
3 days ago
Reply to  John

Why don’t you provide that information for us all, John, with citation, please. I don’t have much desire to prove your wild claims for you.

John
3 days ago
Reply to  Reggie Taylor

[ eye roll ] You’re saying that you want me to provide a citation for something that doesn’t exist? Ha ha ha! It’s Justin’s job – and apparently yours – to provide any evidence that that SoA spending went out of control the year Walker ordered a raid on the PFD disbursement.

Reggie Taylor
2 days ago
Reply to  John

I don’t claim a specific date for anything. You do. Social spending has been out of control since the first quart of crude arrived through the pipe at Valdez and got taxed. Before that, social spending had to pass through the meat cleaver of income taxpayer resistance, which is what is now occurring to your campaign of Universal Basic Income on the backs of new taxes. You’ve repeatedly cited SB 21 as the foundation of evil. Present your argument, reference it, or stew in taxpayer revolt.

John
2 days ago
Reply to  Reggie Taylor

Is English your second language? JUSTIN chose a moment – specifically, when
“the socialist Bill Walker wrote superseding legislation to essentially steal half or more of the lawful payout.” That is the date we’re talking about, Reg. Smarten up! Why did Walker do this? Neither you nor Justin can point to any wildly excessive SoA spending that occurred at that time because there isn’t any. The problem was that revenue dropped like a rock that fiscal year, creating a budget crisis of Parnell’s doing that Walker had to deal with.

Reggie Taylor
2 days ago
Reply to  John
  • English is my first of three languages
  • The governor doesn’t “write legislation”; the Legislature does
  • Please describe the “budget crisis of Parnell’s doing that Walker had to deal with”
ketchikantstandyall
6 days ago

I wonder what Gov. Hammond would have to say about the mess we’re in now.

Reggie Taylor
6 days ago

As ugly as it sounds, we’re in vastly better shape than any other state in the union. Most are in hock up to their necks. We have the PF, and it’s earning returns. We just need to protect it from the wolves, and that includes “the poor” who demand a $multi-thousand dividend.

Brad Keithley
6 days ago

What Reggie (continually) ignores in his comments is that when cut, the “free money” from PFDs doesn’t go away; it simply is shifted to shielding the Top20%, non-residents, and oil companies from paying taxes for the increased cost of government spending. The result is that they don’t care if spending increases because they don’t have to pay for it; middle and lower-income families do. Hammond split the use 50/50 between middle and lower-income Alaska families (who benefit most from PFD cuts) and the Top20%, non-residents, and oil companies (who benefit most from using it as a tax subsidy). Reggie instead… Read more »

Reggie Taylor
6 days ago
Reply to  Brad Keithley

That annual $1 billion (or more, if we yield to the demands for more) shields everybody from new or increased taxes, not just the “top 20%ers”. The “top 20%” can never pay $1 billion in new taxes to this state. That is a fantasy. Just like the PFD is demanded to grow, so will taxes. The middle class, including the lower end, will be included soon, and you still won’t equal the current PFD appropriation. I care very much about the obscene spending, but increased taxes won’t fix it. If that was true, we could simply tax our way to… Read more »

Justin Michesloff
6 days ago
Reply to  Reggie Taylor

I am compelled to agree with you on this comment Reggie. Obscene spending which is largely social spending is the problem. Oddly, those who have created and perpetuate this lack of fiscal accountability do not and cannot run their personal finances or their private businesses this way, yet they continue this in our government. Should they work the budget in the fashion required in the private sector, this “problem” would not exist. Unfortunately, these closet communists, many of whom are imports from the west coast cannot see the hypocrisy of their actions if done in the name of government. After… Read more »