Texas Association of Realtors, Tax Cuts & Jobs Act

  1. The economic impact of House Bill 31 – a biennial economic impact of $4.9 billion would result from a reduction in the state sales tax rate.
  2. The economic impact of Senate Bill 1 – a biennial economic impact of $4.2 billion would result from an expansion to the Homestead Exemption.
  3. The comparative impacts – over the biennial observation period, a reduction to the state sales tax would generate $668 million more in economic impacts to the state of Texas.
  4. An economic development perspective – includes an examination of other qualitative factors that should be considered when proposing changes to the tax structure.
  • Sales taxes are more regressive than a property taxes. Therefore, House Bill 31 would provide a greater benefit to lower-income households.
  • For property taxes, the proportional tax burden is not as drastic across income levels. Thus, the tax benefit would be more equally distributed across households.
  • Property tax reductions constitute a stronger economic incentive for potential residents.
  • Households at different income levels are likely to spend their tax breaks differently. Sales tax breaks will have a larger impact on lower income households and therefore a larger impact on retail sectors. A higher Homestead Exemption will have a larger impact on higher income households and therefore a larger impact on sectors relating to savings.

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