Current:Home > reviewsGeorgia House speaker proposes additional child income-tax deduction atop other tax cuts -消息
Georgia House speaker proposes additional child income-tax deduction atop other tax cuts
SignalHub View
Date:2025-04-11 06:45:45
ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia House Republicans are proposing an additional tax cut for parents.
House Speaker Jon Burns on Wednesday said his GOP caucus will back a plan to raise the amount that parents can deduct per child from their yearly state income taxes to $4,000 from the current $3,000. With Georgia’s income tax rate currently at 5.49%, that works out to as much as $55 more per child, or about $150 million statewide.
“While rising child care costs are here with us every day, we’re hoping this extra $1,000 deduction per child will help alleviate some of those costs for the parents,” Burns, of Newington, told reporters at a news conference.
The new tax cut proposal comes as Burns and the other 235 representatives and senators face reelection later this year.
The speaker also reiterated his earlier proposal to increase the state homestead exemption from $2,000 to $4,000. That amount could save homeowners nearly $100 million statewide, according to projections. Senators have countered with a plan that would cap the rate at which assessed property values could rise for tax purposes, which could limit future property tax increases.
Burns is also backing a plan announced by Republican Gov. Brian Kemp in December to speed up an already-planned cut in the state income tax rate. As of Jan. 1, Georgia has a flat income tax rate of 5.49%, passed under a 2022 law that transitioned away 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 announced in December would retroactively drop the rate to 5.39% as of Jan. 1. The total change is projected to cost the state $1.1 billion in foregone revenue, including an extra $300 million for the cut from 5.49% to 5.39%.
Burns also unveiled a plan to move all of Georgia’s unallocated surplus cash into its rainy day account, a bill also being pushed by Kemp. Georgia had $10.7 billion in unallocated surplus at the end of the last budget year, in addition to a rainy day fund filled to the legal limit of $5.4 billion, or 15% of the prior year’s tax revenue.
Burns said the move would “allow the state to save responsibly, build our reserves, and provide more taxpayer relief to Georgia families both in the short term and the long term when our financial situation may not be as strong.”
It’s unclear what the practical effect of putting all the surplus cash into the rainy day fund would be. Lawmakers can only spend up to the amount Kemp allows, whether from the rainy day fund, the unallocated surplus, or regular revenue.
However, it could reduce political pressure to spend the unallocated surplus, a move Kemp has mostly resisted before allocating $2 billion of it for spending in his current budget proposal. Democrats have attacked the surplus, saying the state is piling up cash while ignoring critical needs.
“We’re starting this year with a $16 billion surplus, $11 billion in unallocated funds,” Democratic Sen. Nabilah Islam Parkes of Lawrenceville said at a news conference last week. “This isn’t Monopoly money. This is hard-earned tax dollars that should be reinvested in improving the life of every Georgian.”
veryGood! (1549)
Related
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Wait times to exit Burning Man drop after flooding left tens of thousands stranded in Nevada desert
- Lab data suggests new COVID booster will protect against worrisome variant
- Man who killed 6 members of a Nebraska family in 1975 dies after complaining of chest pain
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Here's why the US labor movement is so popular but union membership is dwindling.
- Latest out of Maui: The recovery, rebuilding begins after deadly wildfires
- U.N. nuclear agency reports with regret no progress in monitoring Iran's growing enrichment program
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Mexican pilot dies in plane crash during gender reveal party gone wrong
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Kia, Ford, Harley-Davidson among 611,000 vehicles recalled: Check car recalls here
- Voters concerned with Biden's economy, Smash Mouth's Steve Harwell dies: 5 Things podcast
- NFL head coach hot seat rankings: Ron Rivera, Mike McCarthy on notice entering 2023
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Alaska couple reunited with cat 26 days after home collapsed into river swollen by glacial outburst
- Stock market today: Asian shares fall back amid selling of China property shares
- Fan accused by player of using Hitler regime language is booted from U.S. Open
Recommendation
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
Mexican pilot dies in plane crash during gender reveal party gone wrong
Steve Harwell, former Smash Mouth frontman, dies at 56, representative says
Why Whoopi Goldberg Missed The View's Season 27 Premiere
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
Milwaukee suburb to begin pulling millions of gallons a day from Lake Michigan
Tropical Storm Lee forms in Atlantic, forecast to become major hurricane heading to the Caribbean
Alex Murdaugh seeks new trial in murders of wife and son, claiming clerk tampered with jury