Commentary: Chapter 313 agreements benefit Texas
Chapter 313 economic development agreements attract jobs and investment to Texas, make money for the state and grow school districts’ tax bases. This reality runs contrary to pervasive and persistent myths about the program, which assert school districts that enter into Chapter 313 agreements must be “subsidized” by the state. Misrepresentations about this program hurt…
Read MoreA Texas economic incentive offers massive tax breaks to companies, but its renewal isn’t a done deal
Chapter 313, a decades-old law designed to lure companies to Texas with property tax breaks, expires in 2022. Lawmakers looking to renew it face opposition from critics who say it’s unfair to many Texas schools.
Read MoreTexas Tax Talk: Development Bill Needs Bilateral Buy-In
This edition of Texas Tax Talk takes a closer look at Chapter 313, the drivers behind potential changes to the program, and arguments both for and against a program overhaul.
Read MorePreparing the Texas grid for the next polar vortex will be expensive. Next up: How to pay for it
But lawmakers disagree about how to pay for such an effort — which could cost billions of dollars — and whether any amount of state money at all should go toward winterization of private plants.
Read MoreHas Samsung lived up to past incentives agreements in Austin?
Samsung has been building semiconductors in Austin for more than 20 years. It has already benefited from more economic incentives than any other company in the region:
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