Chattanooga Times Free Press

Sales tax holidays

Tennessee, Georgia to offer tax-free items this weekend

- BY TIM OMARZU STAFF WRITER

Tennessee’s back-toschool sales tax holiday starts Friday, thanks to state legislatio­n that moved the event to the last weekend in July, which means it overlaps Georgia’s sales tax holiday that starts Saturday.

Before this year, Tennessee’s sales tax holiday ran during the first weekend in August, which is when Alabama has its three-day back-to-school tax holiday in cities that choose to waive sales taxes.

State Sen. Joey Hensley, of Hohenwald, Tenn., about 90 miles southwest of Nashville, said he sponsored legislatio­n that changed the date in Tennessee because school is starting sooner — not to compete with neighborin­g states.

“I had lots of constituen­ts talk to me about it and complain that school

already had started by the time the [August] weekend came, and they’d like to be able to buy school supplies and clothes before school started,” Hensley said. “Other states did not factor in at all. As a matter of fact, I didn’t know Georgia [and Alabama] had one.”

Tennessee’s three-day tax holiday from Friday to Sunday is longer than Georgia’s two-day event on Saturday and Sunday — and more generous.

Tennessee waives taxes for computers with a price tag of up to $1,500, and for school supplies and clothing that cost $100 or less. Georgia’s sales tax holiday has some limits lower than Tennessee’s — $1,000 per computer and $20 per item for school supplies — with the two states tied at $100 per item of clothing.

“I think it gives Tennessee a little bit of a leg up,” said Nate Roach, general manager of the Best Buy on Gunbarrel Road near Hamilton Place mall.

The annual tax holiday is one of the biggest days of the year for Best Buy, he said, mainly because people come to buy computers, including Apple MacBooks and other computers that cost more than $1,000 but less than $1,500.

“It is literally second to Black Friday,” Roach said, referring to the Friday after Thanksgivi­ng. “It is pretty wild.”

Susan Bass, co-owner of Colony 13, a locally owned boutique at Northgate Mall that just celebrated its 40th birthday, expects a good turnout this weekend.

“It’s a little bit earlier this year, so I’m expecting it to be big,” said Bass, who thinks back-to-school shoppers will home in on her store’s “Simply Southern” and “Life is Good” T-shirts.

While Tennessee and Georgia hold statewide back-to-school sales tax holidays, Alabama’s threeday event is only in cities that choose to waive taxes. Near Chattanoog­a, that includes Scottsboro, Ala., which is home to Unclaimed Baggage, a destinatio­n retailer of used clothing, electronic devices and other items.

Consumers may flock to sales tax holidays, but the events have their critics.

Some say they’re a giveaway to corporate retailers who don’t have to cut prices, since customers’ savings come from not paying sales tax.

Another criticism is that tax holidays merely get consumers to hold off on purchases they would make anyway — such as new computers — until the tax holidays roll around, depriving states of revenue.

Seventeen states, primarily in the Southeast, stand to lose more than $300 million in tax revenue because they waive sales taxes on back-toschool items and other goods, including hunting gear, energy-efficient appliances and severe weather preparedne­ss, according to the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n research organizati­on with offices in Washington, D.C., North Carolina and Wisconsin.

“Policy makers tout sales tax holidays as a way for families to save money. On the surface, this sounds good,” ITEP said. “However, a two- to three- day sales tax holiday for selected items does nothing to reduce taxes for low- and moderate-income taxpayers during the other 362 days of the year.

“Sales taxes are inherently regressive. In the long run, sales tax holidays leave a regressive tax system unchanged, and the benefits of these holidays for working families are minimal.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER ?? Kohl’s account supervisor Billye DeVries-Crowdis installs tax-free weekend signs featuring dorm room storage units Wednesday at the Hixson location. “All clothing, single items under $100, is available tax-free on Friday, Saturday and Sunday,” Carry...
STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER Kohl’s account supervisor Billye DeVries-Crowdis installs tax-free weekend signs featuring dorm room storage units Wednesday at the Hixson location. “All clothing, single items under $100, is available tax-free on Friday, Saturday and Sunday,” Carry...

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