State-Sponsored Investment Tax Incentives: Classic Competition, or Constitutionally Constrained?

by Lucy Kalnes March 18 2006, 02:24

I. Introduction

The Supreme Court heard arguments on March 1st concerning the constitutionality of an Ohio investment tax credit offered to the DaimlerChrysler Corporation.  The credit, entitling DaimlerChrysler to a "ten-year 100 percent property tax exemption, as well as an investment tax credit of 13.5% against state corporate franchise tax for certain qualifying investments," is meant to encourage a $1.2 billion Jeep plant project in Toledo.[1]  The investment tax credit is being attacked on the grounds that, as a state action, it unconstitutionally burdens interstate commerce in violation of the Commerce Clause.[2]  This sort of tax incentive is hardly anomalous; indeed, 49 states offer similar tax incentives for the purpose of encouraging in-state economic activity, thereby benefiting the citizens of the state.[3]  Given that attracting valuable in-state commercial growth is a fixture of policy in most states, a ruling consistent with the claim of unconstitutionality from the nation's highest Court could have substantial repercussions.

II. Arguments

What are the merits of this claim?  It is the respondents'[4] position that the investment tax credit is "a paradigm of a state tax provision which facially discriminates against interstate commerce."[5]  Underpinning the justification of the preemptive powers of the Commerce Clause is the notion that it is beneficial to "create and preserve a 'national common market' in which economic actors could allocate their activities . . . without interference from preferential state . . . taxation."[6]  When a state manipulates its taxing structure to woo corporate investors, it is behaving no differently than when it subsidizes its milk industry to promote sales of local dairy[7]; the net effect is to disrupt pluralistic economic competition.

The Tax Commissioner for the State of Ohio maintains that state tax incentives are part of the climate of the free market.  Whereas the Commerce Clause precludes state actions granting preference to intra-state transactions, corporate tax incentives act to directly benefit companies with national presence.  The offering state's economy is benefited without any direct discrimination against interstate commercial activity.  As a matter of policy, the petitioner argues that preventing states from being able to offer these incentives to national and global corporations will significantly hinder the ability of the United States to compete in the international business market.[8]

The 6th Circuit came to the conclusion that, although the Supreme Court has "intimated that attempts to create location incentives through the state's power to tax are to be treated differently from direct subsidies," this distinction rested on the presumption that tax incentives "do not 'ordinarily run afoul of [the Commerce Clause]' because they are not generally 'connect[ed] with the State's regulation of interstate commerce'."[9]  Based on this, the 6th Circuit determined that because the investment tax credit acted the same as would a direct subsidy to the corporations, such discriminatory treatment in favor of intra-state investment activity was indeed unconstitutional.

A skeptical Justice Souter, during oral arguments, remarked that what Respondents were characterizing as "discrimination" was really "differentiation," and that because any corporation based in any state could take advantage of the differential incentive, it was not facially discriminatory.[10]  In addition to having an uphill battle on the issue of constitutionality, the Commissioner has also appealed the issue of standing, arguing that Respondents are not particularly adversely affected by the tax incentive, and therefore have no colorable claim.[11]  While it is unlikely that the current Court will affirm the 6th Circuit and hold that these sorts of tax incentives facially discriminate, it is important to consider under what circumstances these sorts of state-funded, indirect subsidies could work mischief on the national economy.  It is possible that these credits only strengthen flourishing state economies, economies which can afford the investment cost of the credit.  Taken to its logical (though extreme) conclusion, these incentives might create state sub-economies of such varying degrees of strength so as to constitute the sort of "economic balkanization" of the nation that the Commerce Clause exists to prevent.[12] 

III. Conclusion

At the end of the day, however, it is very unlikely that this sort of melodramatic argument will hold any sway in a situation in which the challenged practice is so widely used as this.  For now, we wait.

[1] Cuno v. DaimlerChrysler, 386 F.3d 738, 741 (6th Cir. 2004).

[2] Wilkins v. Cuno, 126 S.Ct. 36 (2005) (Mem.).

[3] See DaimlerChrysler, 386 F.3d at 741.

[4] Respondents are individual and small business taxpayers of Ohio and Toledo.  Respondent's Brief at 4, Wilkins v. Cuno, 126 S.Ct. 36(2005) (No. 04-1724).

[5] Id. at 8.

[6] Id. at 28-29.

[7] See generally West Lynn Creamery v. Healy, 152 U.S. 186 (1994).

[8] Id. at 19-20.

[9] DaimlerChrysler, 386 F.3d at 746, quoting New Energy Co. of Ind. v. Limbach, 486 U.S. 269, 278 (1988).

[10] Stephen Henderson, Ohio Tax Incentives Seem Safe Before U.S. High Court (Mar. 2, 2006), KNIGHT RIDDER NEWSPAPERS, available at www.ohio.com/mld/ohio/news/state/13998644.htm (Mar 16, 2007).

[11] Reply Brief for the Petitioner at 3, Wilkins v. Cuno, 126 S.Ct. 36 (2005) (No. 04-1724).

[12] Respondent's Brief at 29, Wilkins v. Cuno, 126 S.Ct. 36 (2005) (No. 04-1724).

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