Econ think-tank calls out Georgia Legislature
April 8, 2009 at 4:42 pm by Scott Henry in News“Georgia Budget Raises Taxes on Middle-Income Families to Pay for Capital Gains Tax Breaks for Wealthiest Investors”
That’s the heading of a report issued today (PDF) by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, a Washington D.C-based think-tank. The tax increase it mentions is the elimination of the state homeowners tax relief grant, which will cost Georgians about $430 million a year. On the other hand, the capital gains tax break, passed in the waning hours of the General Assembly, is expected to spare well-heeled taxpayers an estimated half-billion dollars a year.
Here’s ITEP’s final analysis:
“Georgia lawmakers have sent Governor Perdue a budget that dramatically shifts the cost of funding public services away from the wealthiest Georgia taxpayers, and further burdens middle- and low-income families,” said ITEP director Matthew Gardner. “While paring back the HTRG could play a constructive role in helping to balance Georgia’s budget in a fair and sustainable way, the legislature’s decision to cut capital gains taxes for upper-income taxpayers makes the state tax system even more unfair.”
ITEP is a non-profit, non-partisan research and education organization that works on government taxation and spending policy issues. So says its online literature. I’m guessing, however, from its list of board members – Robert Kuttner, founding editor of The American Prospect; Robert Reich, secretary of labor under Clinton; and a California union head, among others – that’s its likely considered a left-leaning organization.
Still, just because the group has a political POV doesn’t mean what it says ain’t true.











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