SEATTLE — Outgoing Washington Gov. Jay Inslee is proposing a novel tax on personal wealth above $100 million in hopes of plugging a budget shortfall and averting cuts to education, mental health services and police.
The tax would apply to about 3,400 residents — Microsoft founder Bill Gates among them — and bring in $10.3 billion over four years, Inslee, a Democrat, said Tuesday.
No other states — and only a few countries — have taxes structured the way Inslee is proposing, according to the Tax Foundation, a conservative-leaning policy organization.
A spokesperson for Washington's Democratic governor-elect, Bob Ferguson, said he is reviewing Inslee's proposal. Ferguson recently told The Seattle Times he would not rule out tax increases to cover the budget shortfall, which Inslee said is estimated at $16 billion over four years.
Lawmakers in several Democratic-led states, including Washington, have in recent years proposed wealth or other taxes on their richest inhabitants, with Massachusetts voters in 2022 approving a ''millionaire tax'' — an income tax surcharge on those making more than $1 million a year.
Washington, which does not have an income tax, is considered to have one of the most regressive tax systems in the country, meaning lower-income residents pay a larger share than richer ones. Voters in November overwhelmingly upheld the state's new capital gains tax against a repeal effort, demonstrating a desire to make the tax system fairer, Inslee said.
''The state and the nation has to respond to this inequity beyond human imagination,'' Inslee said. ''We cannot survive as a healthy, robust community ... while we have this level of poverty and want amidst this enormous wealth.''
Republicans in the Legislature blasted the proposal, saying the state has a problem with spending, not revenue. In an emailed statement, Rep. Travis Couture, of Allyn, the ranking Republican on the House Appropriations committee, called it unserious.