Chicago will soon have the highest sales tax of any major city in
the US. Not the highest sales tax in the US -- there is a town in
northeastern Alabama, Arab, which imposes sales taxes as high as 12% --
but the highest of any major city. (Alabama's sales taxes -- designed
to place the maximum burden on poor people, while making life easier
for upper-income residents, particularly the property-owners --
typically tax even groceries!) An AP article reports:
Among the things Chicago wants to be known for, having the highest
total sales taxes of any major U.S. city is probably not one of them.
But that's what it's getting after the Cook County Board voted Saturday
to double the county sales tax to 1.75 percent. When added to the
city's sales tax, the county' increase has the cumulative effect of
setting a 10.25 percent sales tax on goods bought in Chicago.
When the county rate increase takes effect in November, someone buying $100 worth of merchandise in Chicago would pay $110.25.
The rates in New York and Los Angeles are below 8.5 percent. The next
highest rate in the country is in Memphis, Tenn., at 9.25 percent.
The tax increase is expected to add about $426 million annually to
county coffers, and the money is meant to close a projected $234
million deficit. The budget is also designed to create more than 1,000
new county jobs.