Op-Ed: Illinois is closed for business

Op-Ed: Illinois is closed for business

Spread the love

The policies coming from Springfield send a clear message: Illinois is closed for business. While other states enact pro-growth policies and create economic opportunity, Illinois is weakening the market forces that once powered its growth. As a result, businesses and individuals are fleeing the state, further weakening economic conditions and pushing the state further towards a fiscal cliff.

The recently-released 19th edition of Rich States, Poor States, co-authored by native-Chicagoan Steve Moore, Dr. Arthur B. Laffer, and Jonathan Williams, ranks the Land of Lincoln 45th for economic outlook. Illinois has the eighth-highest corporate tax rate, sixth-highest property tax rate, and sixth-highest burden across all other minor taxes. Poor fiscal stewardship is reflected in it having the second-highest unfunded pension liabilities per capita and sixth-highest debt service costs. The prohibition on graduated income taxes in the state’s constitution is perhaps the only bright spot.

These policy choices have led residents to vote with their feet. Since 2016, more than 900,000 Illinoisans have left for one of the other 49 states. Their top destinations are Florida, Wisconsin, Texas, Indiana and Missouri.

One of the most destructive policy choices the state has made is its Interchange Fee Prohibition Act. Passed in 2024, the law prevents banks and payment networks from collecting interchange fees on the tax and tip portions of credit card transactions. It would require overhauling payment infrastructure never designed to separate transactions at that level, driving up compliance and implementation costs across the board.

The attempt to regulate interchange fees captures exactly the sort of top-down economic management that is driving opportunity elsewhere. Interchange fees underpin the electronic payments system — ensuring swift processing, protecting against fraud, and funding rewards programs used by 31.6 million Illinoisans. This is not a product of taxpayer dollars or government fiat, but an innovation of private industry that Springfield seeks to tear down.

The law has faced legal challenges and has yet to take effect — the Office of the Comptroller of Currency recently issued an interim final rule preempting the state law and reaffirming that fee practices of national banks are governed by federal standards. Notably, comptrollers of both parties, including under the Biden administration, have opposed the IFPA, underscoring that this is bad policy by any measure. The consequences have been stayed for now, but the troubling message has already been sent.

The cumulative effect of uncompetitive policies is to drive commerce out of the state. Chicago was once the proud capital of the Midwest; today it is seeing an exodus of businesses to more competitive states. Boeing moved its headquarters from Chicago to Northern Virginia in 2022, and when the company recently announced it would return some operations to the Midwest, it selected St. Louis. Caterpillar, in Illinois since the 1930s, fled for Texas. The hedge fund Citadel left for Florida. Tyson Foods moved from Chicago to Northwest Arkansas. These high-profile departures reflect a policy environment hostile to innovation and growth, and as workers and businesses leave, those who remain have fewer opportunities.

Illinois and the contrast with other states in the region illustrates that decline is a choice. Ohio had been an outmigration state for as far back as reliable data are available, but broke that trend in 2023 and now has a 2.75% flat personal income tax. Indiana has remained in the top 10 of the Rich States, Poor States index since 2014 and seen consistent in-migration since 2018. The Hoosier State is more competitive than Illinois across nearly every critical economic policy variable, including right-to-work protections, a 2.95% personal income tax, no estate tax, and a 4.9% corporate income tax (4.6 points lower than Illinois). Tennessee has become one of the most dynamic, pro-growth economies in the nation as a zero-income-tax state, attracting more than 450,000 net new residents since 2019.

Outmigration reduces economic opportunity and exacerbates Illinois’s fiscal challenges. Fewer workers mean fewer taxpayers, forcing ever-growing tax burdens on the private economy to fund public services and pay off decades of pension underfunding. The state risks a vicious cycle of outmigration, deficits, and tax increases.

The current prognosis is dire, but the future need not be. By enacting competitive policy and embracing the free market, other states have unleashed their economies, attracted workers, won investment, and created opportunity. Just as policy choices are weighing on Illinois today, pro-growth policies could power an economic comeback.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board Executive Committee for January 8, 2026

Will County Board Executive Committee Meeting | January 8, 2026 Overall Meeting SummaryThe Will County Board Executive Committee met on Thursday, January 8, 2026, tackling a heavy agenda that included...
Screenshot 2026-01-15 at 4.44.13 PM

Beecher Schools Plan Updates for Aging Phone System and Accounting Software

Beecher School District 200-U Meeting | January 14, 2026 Article Summary: District 200-U administrators presented plans to overhaul the district's outdated telephone system and transition to a new HR and...
The fire at Woldhuis Sunrise Greenhouse had the mutual aid of 19 other agencies-photo courtesy Woldhuis.

Blaze Destroys Building and Food Truck at Woldhuis Sunrise Nursery

By Andrea Arens A massive fire tore through Woldhuis Sunrise Nursery late Thursday morning, destroying one greenhouse building, a food truck, damaging another building and drawing firefighters from across the...
Pritzker signs Clean Slate Act to automatically seal some criminal convictions

Pritzker signs Clean Slate Act to automatically seal some criminal convictions

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker has signed legislation to automate the state’s record-sealing process for individuals with certain criminal...
Will County Board Graphic.02

Freight Clusters Drive Push for Overhaul of Wilmington-Peotone Road; County Advances Broader 2050 Plan

Will County Board Meeting | January 15, 2026 Article Summary: Citing the emergence of "new freight clusters," Will County is seeking federal support for a massive study to redesign 22...
sunny hill nursing home joliet il

Sunny Hill Administrator Defends Private Room Model Amidst Capacity Discussions

Will County Board Public Health & Safety Committee Meeting | January 7, 2026 Article Summary: During the January 7, 2026, meeting, Sunny Hill Nursing Home Administrator Maggie McDowell reported a...
Beecher Graphic.3

Village Board Approves $336,000 in Bills; Review Tax Receipts

Village of Beecher Board Meeting | January 12, 2026 Article Summary: The Beecher Village Board handled routine financial business, approving a substantial list of bills and payroll. The Village Clerk...
Elite private colleges can’t cap off price-fixing collusion class action

Elite private colleges can’t cap off price-fixing collusion class action

By Scott Holland | Legal NewslineThe Center Square A federal judge in Chicago has refused to end an antitrust class action complaint accusing elite universities of colluding in the financial...
Illinois Quick Hits: GOP gubernatorial forum set for Monday

Illinois Quick Hits: GOP gubernatorial forum set for Monday

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – All four Republican gubernatorial candidates are scheduled to participate in a forum in East Dundee on Monday....
Experts dispute Arizona governor's claims about state-funded school choice program

Experts dispute Arizona governor’s claims about state-funded school choice program

By Zachery SchmidtThe Center Square Arizona education experts are pushing back on claims Gov. Katie Hobbs made about the Empowerment Scholarship Account program during her State of the State this...
DOJ claims 'substantial progress' made on Epstein files, but no new releases

DOJ claims ‘substantial progress’ made on Epstein files, but no new releases

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Four weeks after the congressionally-mandated release deadline, the Department of Justice says it is making “substantial progress” in its review of the millions of remaining...
Trump eyes tariffs to pressure Greenland

Trump eyes tariffs to pressure Greenland

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump said Friday that he could use tariffs in his bid to annex Greenland, an Arctic island with critical mineral reserves, proximity to...
Group wants records on Minnesota child care assistance program

Group wants records on Minnesota child care assistance program

By Hayley FelandThe Center Square A Washington, D.C.–based oversight organization has formally asked the Minnesota Department of Children, Youth, and Families to provide internal records that relate to the state’s...
WATCH: Ives investigates tax dollars for NGOs; Republicans say Pritzker raising energy prices

WATCH: Ives investigates tax dollars for NGOs; Republicans say Pritzker raising energy prices

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square's Greg Bishop talks live with Jeanne...
ICE hiring ban bill reignites SAFE-T Act fight at Illinois Capitol

ICE hiring ban bill reignites SAFE-T Act fight at Illinois Capitol

By Catrina Baker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A newly introduced bill that would bar former Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents from working in...