News Story

Liquored Up: Michigan Government Should Exit Its Liquor Wholesale Business

Michigan is one of 18 states in which the state government itself is the statewide wholesaler for all hard liquor (or “spirits”) sold to consumers by retailers, bars and restaurants. Anecdotal and empirical evidence indicates that this arrangement unnecessarily drives up costs, while providing no public safety advantages. State lawmakers should repeal Michigan’s status as a so-called “liquor control” state, and eliminate or shrink the 152-employee Michigan Liquor Control Commission.

As wholesaler, the state is in a unique position to drive up the cost of liquor. The Michigan Liquor Control Commission tacks on a 65 percent mark-up on every bottle sold, plus four separate taxes earmarked for various purposes. On top of this the state imposes a 6 percent retail sales tax. Adding insult to injury, Michigan then artificially restricts competition between retailers by imposing a price control floor, below which stores may not sell.

The Mackinac Center has examined how all this impacts the retail price of Scotch whisky. We collected data on price of J&B Scotch Whisky for all 50 states between 1995 and 2004 from the ACCRA Cost of Living Index and constructed a statistical model that controlled for such things as prices for alternative products; the proportion of the population who are moderate or heavy drinkers; demographics including age, gender and race; employment in manufacturing; employment in the leisure and hospitality industry; the unemployment rate; and the extent to which each state controls the distribution of liquor.

The results show that a fifth of J&B is, on average, $1.59 more expensive in liquor control states compared to non-control (or so-called “license” states), or 6.3 percent higher. We further categorized “control” as either light, moderate or heavy. The price of scotch in light control states, which includes Michigan because the state does not have a retail monopoly, is $0.94 higher than in non-control states. Consumers in “moderate” control states pay $1.72 more, and $2.26 more in “heavy” control states.

Anecdotally, we found similar evidence. On Aug. 10, we looked at liquor prices in Meijer stores located in South Bend, Ind., and Kalamazoo, Mich. Most products were less expensive south of the Michigan border, some by a large margin. Of the 11 liquors in 750 ml bottles we examined, eight were less expensive in the Hoosier state. Out of 10 types in half-gallon containers, eight were cheaper in Indiana.

For example, a fifth of Johnny Walker Black cost almost 37 percent less in Indiana. Of the very few products that cost less in Michigan, the largest price saving was 12 percent.

Supposedly, the regulatory regime responsible for these higher prices makes Michigan safer. But empirical evidence suggests this is a myth.

A 2010 study titled, “Impaired Judgment: The Failure of Control States to Reduce “Alcohol-Related Problems” by economists Don Boudreaux and Julia Williams, found no statistically significant difference between control and license states in binge drinking, alcohol-related traffic fatalities or alcohol-related deaths overall.

The control state concept was born in 1933 after the end of Prohibition, in part due to teetotaler’s fears that bootleggers would smuggle in illegal or adulterated products. Yet ironically, Michigan still has a smuggling problem — in part because of state-mandated price differentials with other states.

The LCC itself estimated that alcohol smuggling costs Michigan around $14 million annually in lost mark-up and tax revenues. They also report that distributors’ trucks have been hijacked and at least one driver shot in the process. Previous Mackinac Center reports show the same consequences from artificially driving up cigarette prices with high excise taxes.

While the focus of our research has been on liquor, provisions of Michigan’s law also drive up beer and wine costs, both for producers and consumers. Notoriously, the state grants exclusive sales territories to beer and wine wholesalers, and encourages anti-consumer collusion between them with bureaucratic “post-and-hold” restrictions on price changes. A 2010 study estimates that the latter increase beer prices as much as 30 percent nationwide, and wine as much as 18 percent, respectively.

Michigan should end its role as liquor wholesaler, and strip unfair privileges that for decades monopoly beer and wine wholesalers have successfully lobbied legislators to preserve.

#####

Michael D. LaFaive is director of the Morey Fiscal Policy Initiative at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. Todd Nesbit, Ph.D., is assistant professor of economics at The College of Charleston and an adjunct scholar with the Mackinac Center, a research and educational institute headquartered in Midland, Mich. Permission to reprint in whole or in part is hereby granted, provided that the author and the Center are properly cited.

Michigan Capitol Confidential is the news source produced by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. Michigan Capitol Confidential reports with a free-market news perspective.

News Story

Granholm the Tax Cutter?

Fresh off being the governor of the state that led the nation with the highest unemployment for 49 consecutive months, former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm wrote an op-ed piece for the Huffington Post about how she thought the United States could create jobs. And now, Granholm is portraying herself as an expert on tax cuts and declaring that Milton Friedman, Adam Smith and Ronald Reagan were wrong about economics:

… I also cut taxes 99 times (small and large) in the first 4.5 years of my terms in the hope that Friedman/Adam Smith/Reagan were right. They were not. We still had the highest unemployment rate in the country. Enough of that experiment. Let’s move to what we know works. … This is what people must learn from Michigan’s laboratory of democracy: laissez-faire trickle-down theory might have been a fine strategy last century. But in a global economy our economic competitors are playing a much more aggressive, hands-on game. We’ve got to do the same: invest and grow rather than cut and lose.

Granholm was responding to a blog post by Lou Glazer, president of Michigan Future Inc., a nonprofit organization that hopes to turn Michigan into a “world class community in a knowledge-driven economy.” 

But James Hohman, assistant director of fiscal policy at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, said Granholm’s record on tax cuts is hardly how she portrays it. He took a look at the major taxes that accounted for $20 billion of the $26 billion in state resources and found no evidence of tax cuts by Granholm.

The income tax was decreased from 4.2 percent in 2000 to 4.0 percent in 2003, and then fell to 3.9 in 2004. But those changes were due to policies enacted while previous Gov. John Engler was in office. Granholm raised the income tax rate to 4.35 percent in 2007.

Meanwhile, liquor, beer, wine, sales and “use tax” rates all were untouched during Granholm’s two terms.

The business tax rate went up in 2007 because of the 22 percent surcharge tacked on top of the Michigan Business Tax. And in 2004, the tax on tobacco was increased from $1.25 a pack to $2 a pack, according to Hohman.

“The income tax and business tax hikes were substantial increases,” Hohman said. “The governor does not have any tax-cut credibility.”

Michigan Capitol Confidential is the news source produced by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. Michigan Capitol Confidential reports with a free-market news perspective.