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Could taxing multinational corporations erase California’s budget deficit? It doesn’t happen

The state’s chronic budget gap between income and spending — $125 billion over the past few years, according to the Legislature’s financial adviser — has left Gov. Gavin Newsom and lawmakers are looking for ways to clean up the state’s finances.

Newsom has so far avoided new taxes to close the loophole, and has tried to sidestep the multibillion-dollar estate tax that could come up in the November election. Union advocates say it would generate about $25 billion a year for four years, about the size of California’s projected deficit, with the proceeds going mostly to health care.

While Newsom may not want to raise taxes as he prepares for the presidential campaign, his fellow Democrats in the Legislature and a number of interest groups increasingly see tax increases as the only way out of the twin problems of the budget deficit and recent cuts in federal aid.

Therefore, the hunt is on for some kind of tax that could be politically successful, especially if the wealth tax is disrupted. The search extended to California’s system of taxing multinational corporations.

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