Sales tax increase

by Doug on March 28, 2008

Lindsey Ziliak, writing for the Evansville Courier Press has an article entitled “State sales tax going up next week.” The sales tax is increasing from 6 cents per dollar to 7 cents per dollar. She denominates this as a “1% increase.” If there are any statisticians out there, I’d like to know if the size of the sales tax increase is more properly designated as a 16% increase. The size of the tax will be 1/6th larger than it was previously, hence, an increase of 16.66%.

{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }

T March 28, 2008 at 13:17 +00006

I think you would say, “The tax rate went up one percentage point, a 16% increase over the previous rate.” Or something like that.

Jason March 28, 2008 at 13:43 +00006

16.66%? I knew more sales taxes were the devil’s work…

Yes, it could be factually stated “Sales taxes have increased by over 16%”

Parker March 28, 2008 at 13:56 +00006

Since what you fork over for a one dollar taxable item goes from $1.06 to $1.07, you could say the effective cost of such goods has gone up slightly LESS than one percent…
(.9434%, if you don’t want to open up Calculator)

Jon March 29, 2008 at 9:09 +00006

The increase in the sales tax rate is 16+ percent.
It’s also an increase of one percentage point.

Both are correct, but it’s not a 1% increase as the Evansville paper reported. Most journalists are notoriously bad at math.

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