Template-type: ReDIF-Paper 1.0 Author-Name: Robert D. Ebel Author-Email: rebel@robertebel.com Author-Workplace-Name: International Center for Public Policy, Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, Georgia State Univeristy Author-Name: Yameng Wang Title: User Charges to Fund State and Local Infrastructure Services Abstract: Twenty years ago, current user charges accounted for 17.7% of United States state and local general revenues from own-sources. That put it well behind the revenue importance of both the sales and gross receipts (24.8%) and property tax (22.5%) categories and (nearly) the same as the sum of the individual and corporate income tax (17.8%). Today, current charges account for 21.1% of state/local own source general revenues—eclipsing the income taxes (18.6%), nearly on par with the property tax (21.2%) and closing in on the sales and gross receipts category (23.6%). Looking ahead, there are four reasons why this trend is likely to continue. The first is the generally recognized need to improve the nation’s physical infrastructure and the recent literature on how to pay for it (e.g., Pagano, 2011, McNichol, 2016; McKinsey, 2017; Geddes, 2017; McBride, 2018; Schanzenbach, Nunn and Nantz, 2017). Second is the “fiscal squeeze” as the relative revenue productivity of the former “big three” (income, sales, and property) are being eroded due to a combination of short-term-after-short-term direct discretionary tax base reductions and the long term effects of changing economic, demographic and institutional trends (Tannenwald, 2001; Brunori, 2012, Luna and Murray, 2015; Wallace, 2012, 2015). Third, in contrast to, or maybe due to, the present a citizen “anti-tax” mood, state and local policymakers have become more permissive to the enactment of local fees and charges (Sjoquist and Stoycheva, 2012) . And, fourth, the technology for employing new charges is improving particularly in the area of motor-vehicle-related activities as revenue collection is facilitated--e.g., smart parking meters that allow governments to accurately monitor and report on the use of public spaces; GPS tracking of vehicle weights and distances driven, emerging modes of road and congestion pricing (Gifford, 2012; Basso and Duvall, 2013; Geddes, 2015). Length: 77 pages Creation-Date: 2018-07 File-URL: https://icepp.gsu.edu/files/2018/07/paper1813.pdf File-Format: application/pdf Handle: RePEc:ays:ispwps:paper1813