JohnAKeith
Senior Member
- Joined
- Dec 24, 2008
- Messages
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No, you are wrong about the program. The company does not get taxes paid back as a credit.
Company A spends $10 million on its production, including salaries, sets, etc. It files a form with the state proving that more than 50% of the spending was in-state.
The company gets credits that it can either a) sell back to the state; or, b) sell to another company or individual.
The credits are worth 25% of the amounts spent in-state. It is not 25% of TAXES PAID. It is not 25% of TAXES PAID. It is 25% of money spent in-state.
If a company spends $10 million in the state, it gets a credit of 25%, or $2.5 million. It can then sell this to another company or individual. If it does, the second company can reduce its tax liability by this amount. The incentive to Company A is it gets $2.5 million back, just for showing up. Company B gets to reduce its tax liability with the state. The state gets nothing, in fact, loses $2.5 million in earned tax revenue.
If the film company wishes to, it can sell its credits back to the state, for 90 cents on the dollar. So, if the company spends $10 million on production costs, it gets a $2.5 million credit. It can sell the credit to the state for $2.15 million. The production company benefits because it has more money to spend on production (or, star salaries), the state suffers because it just spent $2.15 million.
Please read the documentation before making hypotheses on how it works and/or the benefits of the program.
It seems as though some people will always think this program is worth the cost - worth the expense. I don't see how they feel that way, but, w/e, that's democracy. I think if more pople understood the cost, they would be against it, 100%.
Company A spends $10 million on its production, including salaries, sets, etc. It files a form with the state proving that more than 50% of the spending was in-state.
The company gets credits that it can either a) sell back to the state; or, b) sell to another company or individual.
The credits are worth 25% of the amounts spent in-state. It is not 25% of TAXES PAID. It is not 25% of TAXES PAID. It is 25% of money spent in-state.
If a company spends $10 million in the state, it gets a credit of 25%, or $2.5 million. It can then sell this to another company or individual. If it does, the second company can reduce its tax liability by this amount. The incentive to Company A is it gets $2.5 million back, just for showing up. Company B gets to reduce its tax liability with the state. The state gets nothing, in fact, loses $2.5 million in earned tax revenue.
If the film company wishes to, it can sell its credits back to the state, for 90 cents on the dollar. So, if the company spends $10 million on production costs, it gets a $2.5 million credit. It can sell the credit to the state for $2.15 million. The production company benefits because it has more money to spend on production (or, star salaries), the state suffers because it just spent $2.15 million.
Please read the documentation before making hypotheses on how it works and/or the benefits of the program.
It seems as though some people will always think this program is worth the cost - worth the expense. I don't see how they feel that way, but, w/e, that's democracy. I think if more pople understood the cost, they would be against it, 100%.