They raise revenue by other means.
Tennessee has one of the higher sales tax rates of the country, with the non-grocery sales tax reaching 9-10% in many parts of the state, and a roughly average property tax alongside it.
Alabama has one of the lowest property tax rates in the country, but charges a 6% statewide sales tax (only discounted to 5% on groceries) when many local sales taxes bring that up to 9-10%. (Few, if any, counties/cities exempt their own sales taxes for groceries). Hence why the state also has a fairly moderate income tax.
The no-income-tax states just get the revenue from other types of taxes like property, sales, payroll, etc. One way or the other, the state government will get funded. Wealthy people are able to game this system in ways the lower and middle classes can’t.
For example, a wealthy person can identify State A with low property tax and high income tax and State B with high property tax and no income tax. He can then buy property and show no income in State A while renting an apartment and showing all his income in State B. And he can have his company’s headquarters be in a State C with low business taxes and regulation, even if the “headquarters” is little more than P.O. box.
>How do some states (TN, FL, etc) get by with having no income tax?
They raise other taxes instead. This often means lowering income taxes (to help the rich), and raising sales taxes (which hurts the poor) to make up for it.
They also slash public services (don’t spend money fixing roads, have fewer and worse assistance programs, etc).
>Why can’t every state get rid of it?
Because doing so would make life worse for almost everyone (see above).
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