While human service professionals gear up to protect their jobs in the realm of the tentative Illinois budget, businesses aren't taking plans to increase taxes lying down. Take the American Beverage Institute which is lobbying to stop the increase in liquor taxes in order to stem the tide of red ink overtaking state government.
The Legislature has decided to add nearly three cents in additional taxes to the price of a six-pack of beer, 13 cents on a of bottle wine and 80 cents on a fifth of the hard stuff. The liquor tax hike, lobbyists say, would put a strain on distillers and sellers, while putting an additional 4,500 people on the state's unemployment rolls. That's on top of the nearly 20,000 jobs the hospitality industry says it's lost because of the recession.
Let's see, tax booze or tax constituents. If you were a lawmaker, how would you vote? Duh! Especially since the tax hike is estimated to generate nearly $115 million annually.
But here's the argument the liquor industry is really hammering as the still tax awaits Gov. Pat Quinn's signature: Raising the price of a drink hurts low-income taxpayers the hardest. They say one-third of the booze in the state is consumed by Illinoisans with incomes under $50,000 a year. Guess the rich are different than you and The Hound, after all.
There's only one answer to creeping alcohol taxes: The advent of backyard stills and the proliferation of moonshine sales across Illinois. Pass the corn licker, Snuffy!