Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lawmakers reexamine tax credits for film industry

- BY JEFF AMY

ATLANTA — Some Georgia lawmakers are having second thoughts about limiting the value of the state’s lucrative film tax credit.

The Senate Finance Committee voted narrowly Wednesday to rewrite parts of House Bill 1180, which is aimed at creating limits. The bill would still require moviemaker­s to spend more in the state to max out the film tax credit. But it would exempt movies mostly made at large studios in Georgia from a proposed cap on how many tax credits could be cashed in by selling them to others.

Senate Finance Committee Chair Chuck Hufstetler, a Rome Republican, said he thought the exemption for Georgia studios would be so significan­t that remaining production­s that don’t use large Georgia studios would never hit the cap, although it remains in the committee’s version of the bill.

“There’s essentiall­y not a cap on it,” Hufstetler told The Associated Press after the meeting. “I think there are some constraint­s that perhaps are needed on there. But I think at the end of the day, it’s not going to really make a lot of difference.

Hufstetler said movie interests had negotiated the proposal with Lt. Gov. Burt Jones.

The measure moves on to the full Senate for more debate, and if it passes there, senators would have to work out their difference­s with the House before Georgia’s legislativ­e session ends next week. The bill’s House sponsor, Republican Rep. Kasey Carpenter of Dalton, said House leaders would have to discuss their position.

“I think the industry should be pretty pleased,” Carpenter said.

Thanks in large part to tax breaks, production­s including “The Hunger Games,” the Marvel movies, the Fast & Furious installmen­t “Furious 7” and many others shot in Georgia

have made the Peach State a hub for movies and television shows that might otherwise have been shot in Hollywood.

The program has supported thousands of Georgia jobs and the building of studios. But it’s hugely expensive — the state is projected to give out $1.35 billion

in credits this year alone. Statespons­ored evaluation­s show the credit’s cost outweighs its economic benefit. A study last year by Georgia State University suggested the state saw a return of less than 20 cents on the dollar.

Most production companies don’t have enough state income tax liability to use all the credits and they can’t be redeemed for cash. Production companies can sell the credits to other people who owe taxes in Georgia, usually at a slight discount.

But lawmakers had grown concerned that billions of dollars in tax credits are outstandin­g, fearing they could all be cashed in at once. In 2022, the state auditor estimated $1.4 billion in such taxes were outstandin­g.

The House had proposed limiting the transfers of tax credits to 2.5% of the state budget, or about $900 million this year. The Senate bill actually lowers that cap to 2.3%, or about $830 million, but it would only apply to production­s that don’t use studios. Any studio with more than 1.5 million square feet would be exempt, as well as any studio completed between now and 2027 that invests at least $100 million.

“I think it’s a big number,” Carpenter said. “I think it’s a much bigger number than what left the House.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/MIKE STEWART ?? Cast member Benedict Cumberbatc­h works in 2017 during the filming of “Avengers: Infinity War” in Atlanta.
AP PHOTO/MIKE STEWART Cast member Benedict Cumberbatc­h works in 2017 during the filming of “Avengers: Infinity War” in Atlanta.

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