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Georgia film tax credit draws scrutiny during budget hearings

♦ Lawmakers are struggling to address a steep revenue drop in state budget hearings.

- By Dave Williams Capitol Beat News Service

ATLANTA — Georgia’s effective but expensive film tax credit came up for discussion Thursday during a legislativ­e hearing on deep budget cuts lawmakers will face when they resume the 2020 General Assembly session next month.

The state’s growing film industry generated about $8.5 billion in economic impact during the last fiscal year, including $2.9 billion in direct spending, Pat Wilson, commission­er of the Georgia Department of Economic Developmen­t, told members of a state Senate Appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee.

About 90,000 Georgians were employed in film and

TV production­s before the coronaviru­s pandemic shut down the industry, Wilson said.

However, Georgia’s most expensive tax credit also costs state taxpayers about $400 million a year.

With Gov. Brian Kemp and legislativ­e leaders looking to reduce state spending even before COVID-19 hit the state, the cost of the tax credit prompted two critical audits last January.

Those audits, in turn, helped spur the introducti­on of legislatio­n calling for stricter rules on the transfer or sale of unused credits, a common practice for production groups that base part of their movie-making work outside of Georgia.

Prohibitin­g the transfer of film tax credits might convince more studios that film in Georgia to move their entire operations to the Peach State, Sen. Jen Jordan, Datlanta, a member of the subcommitt­ee, suggested Thursday.

But Wilson said Georgia would lose a significan­t amount of its film business if the state tried to force film producers to put their headquarte­rs here or lose the tax credits.

“The studios that are writing the checks and paying the money are in Los Angeles,” he said. “A lot of them are moving operations here. That doesn’t mean they’re going to leave the talent base they have in California.”

Meanwhile, Wilson outlined how the economic developmen­t agency plans to prioritize its operations while cutting its budget by nearly $5 million to meet 14% across-the-board spending reductions state agencies are being required to offer up to help offset a substantia­l loss of tax revenue resulting from the coronaviru­s-driven economic lockdown.

He said the department’s marketing activities in global commerce and tourism will absorb the brunt of the cuts rather than the payroll.

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