View stories by State
HOME RSS FEEDS ARCHIVES ABOUT US SITE MAP PUBLICATIONS
Search using      Advanced
Saturday, November 21, 2009
or Browse All States
CRIME & COURTS
ECONOMY & BUSINESS
EDUCATION
ELECTIONS
ENERGY
ENVIRONMENT
GOVS' SPEECHES
HEALTH CARE
HOMELAND SECURITY
POLITICS
RECESSION & RECOVERY
SOCIAL POLICY
TAXES & BUDGET
TECHNOLOGY
TRANSPORTATION
ARCHIVES
COMMENTARY
PUBLICATIONS
RSS FEEDS
STATE SPEECHES
NEWS ALERTS
PUBLIC POLICY LINKS
TOOLBARS
STATE BLOGS
ISSUE BLOGS


Register to comment on Stateline.org Stories

Friday, July 29, 2005

Tax breaks a prelude to school bells

Comments Write the editor Print this story

With the dog days of summer fast approaching, the start of school is just around the corner, and two states have already begun tax-free holidays designed to help families stock up on clothing and school supplies at a slightly lower cost. 

Over the next several weeks, 10 states in all will exempt certain items that kids need for school from state sales tax for a period ranging from a single day to a week and a half.

Florida kicked off the 2005 season of back-to-school sales tax holidays July 23 with the nation's longest sales-tax holiday - nine days. Georgia's sales tax exemption period runs July 28-31. The other eight states (Connecticut, Iowa, Massachusetts, Missouri, New Mexico, North Carolina, South Carolina and Texas) hold their sales tax holidays in August, according to the Federation of Tax Administrators.

Next year two more states will join the pack. Lawmakers in Maryland and Tennessee this year passed legislation creating tax-free back-to-school holidays in 2006.

Arturo Perez, a fiscal analyst for the National Conference of State Legislatures, said that even though the tax-free periods cost states little, states are more likely to offer them during times of economic prosperity.

"States really didn't have the luxury over the last few years to institute any new sales tax holidays," Perez said.

In 1997, New York became the first state to offer a limited sales tax exemption prior to the start of the school year.

The idea of a tax holiday, which state legislators tout as a boost both to working families and local retail sales, proved popular with the public and on both sides of the aisle in statehouses. A handful of states followed in New York's footsteps.

But some states strapped for cash during the recent economic downturn suspended the tax holiday, and only recently have brought it back as revenues began to rebound. Florida reinstituted its sales tax holiday in 2004, and forfeited an estimated $35.5 million in revenue as a result, according to NCSL estimates.

Some states lost interest in the tax holidays during the fiscal crisis that began in 2001 because states were eager to collect any revenue they could, said Ryan Burruss, a spokesman for the Federation of Tax Administrators.

"When there's no justification for any kind of revenue cutback, they're not going to have it ... Now that there's money in the bank, they're more open to the option," Burruss said.

Send your comments on this story to letters@stateline.org. Selected reader feedback will be posted in the Letters to the editor section.

Contact Kathleen Hunter at khunter@stateline.org.



Comment on this story in the space below by registering with Stateline.org.

Issues: Economy and Business    Education    Politics    Taxes and Budget    Welfare & Social Policy   

COMMENTS (0)
There are no comments yet, would you like to add one?
Recession and Recovery
Read the latest news, analysis and research on the economic crisis in the states in Stateline.org's new Recession and Recovery special section.
The Stimulus and the StatesThe Stimulus and the
States

Follow how states are managing the stimulus money and which programs are receiving funding as part of the recovery effort using Stateline.org's stimulus special section.
Stateline Blogs
Stateline.org has compiled an extensive list of state issue political blogs to make it convenient for you to follow state government.

If a blog you find interesting and informative is not on our list, tell us about it by sending an email to editor@stateline.org.
Blogs organized by Issue
lineBlogs organized by State
State Public Policy Resources
Stateline.org has put together a list of state public policy resources organized by issue. Here, you will find useful links to essential information from government, academia, and think tanks. If you have a link to add, please email us.


The Pew Charitable Trusts applies the power of knowledge to solve today’s most challenging problems. Pew's Center on the States identifies and advances state policy solutions.