Corporate Tax

Gov. Sanders signs tax cut bills into law

by Talk Business & Politics staff (staff2@talkbusiness.net)

Gov. Sarah Sanders signed into law Wednesday (June 19) a series of significant tax cuts that will result in personal and corporate taxes falling by a half-percent at the top income rates.

The highest personal income tax rate has been dropped from 4.4% to 3.9% and the top corporate tax rate from 4.8% to 4.3%. The financial impact of the tax cuts are $256.1 million annually for the personal income tax reduction and $66.2 million annually for the corporate tax reduction. Over 1.1 million Arkansans will benefit from the tax rate reduction.

Also, about $290 million of the state’s $708.1 million estimated budget surplus in the current fiscal year that ends June 30th will be placed in the Arkansas Reserve Fund Set-Aside fund.

Gov. Sanders signs tax cut bills into law

Governor Hutchinson Provides Weekly Briefing on Tax Relief Plan, COVID-19

LITTLE ROCK – During his weekly briefing today, Governor Asa Hutchinson shared his proposal for providing additional tax relief to Arkansans, updated quarantine guidance for schools, and the latest on COVID-19 in Arkansas.

Tax Reduction Plan

Governor Hutchinson presented his tax relief proposal for a Special Session of the General Assembly. The Governor noted the tentative beginning date of October 25th will be postponed to allow time to further achieve legislative consensus.

The reduction plan is composed of three elements:

  1. Provide a low-income tax break and increase the individual tax credit.

  2. Combine the low- and middle-income tables to focus on a tax break for middle incomes.

  3. Lower the top rate from 5.9% to 5.5% in the next year, and then lower to 5.3% by 2024.

A corporate tax cut is also being discussed, which would require the state to meet certain financial revenue responsibilities to ensure the tax cut can be properly funded.

Governor Hutchinson said that there is a broad agreement with many legislators over the tax cut plan and hopes that they can put this together into a bill and have it ready to go.

“Certain elements of this plan are still in discussion, and we want to be able to get the facts out so the public can participate in this discussion,” Governor Hutchinson said, “This is a good tax reduction plan and, most importantly, can be paid for out of recurring revenue and not one-time money.”

Governor Hutchinson announced protocol changes for K-12 schools.

The first change is to update the definition of a close contact in a school setting from within 6ft for 15 minutes of a case while infectious to within 3ft for 15 minutes.

The second change is to allow test-to-stay protocols to apply to extracurricular activities instead of only applying to the school day.

These changes will affect quarantine protocols for school districts.

Vaccination eliminates the need for quarantine, and if both the case and the contact are masked, there is no need for quarantine.