Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lawmakers approve tax cuts for people, businesses

- BY JEFF AMY

ATLANTA — Income taxes for Georgia residents and businesses are set to fall after the state Senate gave final passage to a pair of tax cuts Wednesday.

House Bill 1015, which passed 40-12, would accelerate an already-planned income tax cut for individual­s. House Bill 1023, which passed 34-17, would decrease the corporate income tax rate to match that of individual­s. Both measures head to Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, who is expected to sign them into law.

“We are continuing to conservati­vely manage our budget and put money back in the hands of Georgians,” said Sen. Bo Hatchett, a Cornelia Republican who is a floor leader for Kemp.

Some Democratic senators, but not all, voted against each bill. But the only person who spoke against the cuts was Sen. Colton Moore, a Trenton Republican, who earlier Wednesday challenged lawmakers to cut personal income tax rates by even more.

“It’ll be a fraud when you go back home and say, ‘I’m only cutting the income tax by a tenth of a point,’” said Moore, who neverthele­ss voted for the measure.

Kemp and other Republican leaders back the measure to roll back the personal income tax rate to 5.39%, retroactiv­e to Jan. 1. As of that date, Georgia gained a flat income tax rate of 5.49%, passed under a 2022 law that transition­ed away

“We are continuing to conservati­vely manage our budget and put money back in the hands of Georgians.”

— SEN. BO HATCHETT, R-CORNELIA

from a series of income brackets that topped out at 5.75%.

The income tax rate is supposed to drop 0.1% a year until reaching 4.99%, if state revenues hold up. The plan to drop the rate from 5.49% to 5.39%, announced in December, would cost an additional $360 million. That’s on top of the $800 million the state is projected to forgo as part of the earlier cut.

The corporate income tax had stayed at 5.75%, but supporters argue it’s unfair to tax businesses at a higher rate than individual­s. Under the bill the corporate income tax rate would keep falling along with the personal income tax rate until reaching 4.99%.

The corporate income tax cut would cost $176 million in its first full year, and $210 million by 2029. But that doesn’t account for future reductions.

Senate Finance Committee Chair Chuck Hufstetler, a Rome Republican, said Georgia’s personal and corporate income tax rates had been the same for decades.

“I think it’s a great measure for Georgia,” Hufstetler said. “We’re continuing to try to reduce our taxes. We’re in a competitiv­e environmen­t with many other states, such as North Carolina, that have received theirs.”

Election-year tax cuts are always popular among Republican­s, and all 236 state House and Senate seats are on the ballot this year.

Even though growth in state tax collection­s is slowing, Georgia can afford tax cuts because the state budgeted to spend much less than what it will collect in taxes and had $10.7 billion in unallocate­d surplus at the end of the last budget year.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JEFF AMY ?? Georgia state Sen. Bo Hatchett, R-Cornelia, speaks to reporters in 2022 at the Georgia Capitol in Atlanta.
AP PHOTO/JEFF AMY Georgia state Sen. Bo Hatchett, R-Cornelia, speaks to reporters in 2022 at the Georgia Capitol in Atlanta.

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