Trust Magazine

COVID-19’s Lingering Effects on Philadelphia’s Wage and Earnings Tax

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In this Issue:

  • Winter 2025
  • 40 Years of Investment in Innovative Science
  • Looking Back on a Year of Milestones
  • How U.S. Public Opinion Has Changed in 20 Years
  • Finding Answers
  • Two Decades Supporting the Arts in the Philadelphia Region
  • Racial Inequities in Student Loan Repayment
  • Americans Feel Good About Job Security—But Not Pay
  • COVID-19’s Effects on Philadelphia’s Wage and Earnings
  • ’Heights Philadelphia’ Prepares for College and Career
  • The Silly Rule That’s Helping Keep Housing Costs High
  • How Some Weather-Related Disasters Increase Risk of Others
  • Return on Investment
  • Many Americans Perceive a Rise in Dangerous Driving
  • View All Other Issues
COVID-19’s Lingering Effects on Philadelphia’s Wage and Earnings Tax
The Pew Charitable Trusts

When the COVID-19 pandemic ushered in remote and hybrid work, Philadelphia officials wondered how it would affect their wage and earnings tax, especially the portion paid by nonresidents who commuted into jobs based in the city. 

Revenue from the nonresident wage tax has long been a key part of the city’s finances, and is nearly half of the city’s annual revenue. In fiscal year 2024, it raised an estimated $848 million from nonresidents who use fewer public city services and pay a lower rate than residents. An analysis published in October by The Pew Charitable Trusts’ Philadelphia research and policy initiative shows that the makeup of this levy has changed, with proportionally more tax coming from Philadelphians and proportionally less from nonresidents. Controlled for inflation, the amount raised by the nonresident tax has dropped substantially over the past 10 years.

“While remote and hybrid work has reduced the number of commuters working in the city, the improved strength of the city’s economy has bolstered the resident share of the wage tax by producing increased jobs held by Philadelphians,” says Katie Martin, who directs Pew’s Philadelphia initiative.

She says that through all these changes, the tax has continued to produce about half of all locally generated revenue for city government—an estimated $2.51 billion in fiscal 2024 and a projected $2.63 billion in fiscal 2025, which began July 1. 

For years, Philadelphia officials have debated whether the city should be less dependent on the wage tax, which is considered to be more volatile than other revenue sources. Some argue that the tax hurts the city’s ability to retain businesses and residents. But the tax still brings in hundreds of millions of dollars each year from nonresidents, and removing it could put more of a burden on city residents through increases in levies that many nonresidents do not have to pay.

The latest research comes as Philadelphia officials currently debate the city’s overall tax structure via the Philadelphia Tax Reform Commission, which expects to release its findings in early 2025.

’Heights Philadelphia’ Prepares for College and Career Americans Feel Good About Job Security—But Not Pay
Trend Magazine

Can Science and Health Care Gain What’s Missing?

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Trend Magazine

Since the COVID-19 pandemic shook the globe four years ago, headlines and public conversations have focused on the public’s trust—and the lack of it—in science and medicine. But trust, mistrust, and distrust—we’ll get to the meaning behind those terms—have been changing shape in the U.S. for decades. Surveys show declines in trust in health care, especially among populations that historically have been harmed by medical research and scientific abuses whose legacies persist today.