No Need for New Targeted Tax Incentives | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's note: The author of this post is Jon Sanders, who is a Print Columnist for the Carolina Journal, John Hood Publisher.

    RALEIGH     A bill before the North Carolina Senate would create a new state tax credit (PDF) for small businesses that get the federal New Markets Tax Credit, if they decide to make these federally credited investments in North Carolina. The idea would be to further incentivize investment in poorer areas in the state.

    The small businesses already would be qualified for the 39 percent tax credit, spread out over seven years, on their investments. They have to satisfy federal definitions in making "Qualified Equity Investments" in "Qualified Community Development Initiatives." Furthermore, they must have fewer than 500 employees and locate in a high-poverty county.

    The state tax credit that would be established under Senate Bill 522, "New Market Jobs Act," would be styled technically as a "reduction" to the qualifying small business's state premium tax liability, though it would "be afforded the same property and contractual protections as a credit." It would be worth 58 percent of the investment and also spread out over seven years. (No credit would be claimed in the first two years, an 11 percent credit would be claimed each year in the third and fourth years, and a 12 percent credit would be claimed each year in the remaining years.)

    If the state has enough tax credits available, they apparently could be allocated to the investments of small businesses that haven't received the federal credits.

    Trust the tax reforms; no need to restock tax credits

    The tax reform package of 2013 eliminated several tax credits as (among other reforms) it lowered the rates and broadened the bases of corporate and personal income taxes.

    Those reforms are empirically proven ways to boost economic growth, alongside regulatory reform and transportation reform. The beneficial effects of these recent changes are slowly beginning to emerge.

    It would be hasty and self-defeating for state leaders to return to questionable economic practices, awarding tax credits to select companies for particular activities while effectively charging higher tax rates on other companies.

    (A separate but related issue involves the ongoing debate over incentives targeting the film industry, which will — and should— disappear at the end of the year if lawmakers take no action during the current legislative session.)

    If state leaders are unhappy with the pace of increased investment, economic growth, and job creation, then they should consider scrapping the corporate income tax altogether — which would be an all-comers economic development incentive, cutting the tax for everyone without playing favorites.

    Jon Sanders (@jonpsanders) is Director of Regulatory Studies for the John Locke Foundation.
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published)
Enter Your Comment ( no code or urls allowed, text only please )




Another Parton-Connected Project In Trouble Carolina Journal, Editorials, Op-Ed & Politics Burr-McCain-Flake-Coburn VA bill a good first step, but needs to go FURTHER


HbAD0

Latest Op-Ed & Politics

Atheist Soros, although born Jewish, was Nazi collaborator in Hungary in WWII
anti-immigration conservative nationalist beats Social Democrat incumbent 2 to 1
Biden wants to push this in public schools and Gov. deSantis says NO
this at the time that pro-Hamas radicals are rioting around the country
populist / nationalist anti-immigration AfD most popular party among young voters, CDU second

HbAD1

Barr had previously said he would jump off a bridge before supporting Trump
illegal alien "asylum seeker" migrants are a crime wave on both sides of the Atlantic
Decision is a win for election integrity. NC should do the same.

HbAD2

 
Back to Top