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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1984/21766

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contributor.authorWong, John D.-
contributor.authorHugo Wall School of Urban and Public Affairs-
contributor.authorWichita State University-
contributor.authorKansas Public Finance Center-
date.accessioned2012-02-06T17:42:06Z-
date.available2012-02-06T17:42:06Z-
date.issued2006-03-
identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1984/21766-
description"Tax incidence analysis is the study of who ultimately bears the economic burden of a tax. The effective tax rate is the tax rate paid as a percentage of income. A progressive tax is a tax for which the effective tax rate rises as income rises. A proportional tax is a tax for which the effective tax rate does not change with income. A regressive tax is a tax for which the effective tax rate falls as income rises. Individual income, residential property, and retail sales taxes accounted for $6.4 billion or 83.0 percent of all Kansas state and local government taxes in 2003."en
description.statementofresponsibilityPrepared for Kansas Department of Revenue by John D. Wong, J.D., Ph.D.-
format.extent2462773 bytes-
format.mimetypeapplication/pdf-
language.isoEnglish (United States)-
titleKansas Tax Incidence Study: Who Pays Kansas Individual Income, Residential Property, and Retail Sales Taxesen
typeen
Appears in Collections:Kansas Department of Revenue - General Publications

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