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The Effect of Repealing the Insurance Premium Tax

For at least the last 60 years, Florida’s tax policy has provided a clear preference to insurance companies that had a presence in Florida. Since 1988, that preference has been in the form of a credit against a company’s insurance premium taxes of 15 percent of the salaries paid to Florida-based employees. This preference helps to promote the insurance industry in Florida, a desirable, clean industry with relatively high-paying jobs.

The 2017 Legislature is considering SB 378, a bill that would eliminate the insurance premium tax (IPT) credit. This would result in a tax increase of more than $314.5 million.It must be remembered that, while it certainly provides an economic development incentive, the credit was not created as a new tax cut or benefit to Florida insurers, it was used to lessen a significant tax increase on them. The credit was part of an insurance tax overhaul that took two tries to find the right level of taxation, while maintaining a 40 year preference for Florida companies.

This report examines the issues involved with repealing the salary credit and concludes it should be maintained.

Documents to download

  • IPT-FINAL(.pdf, 150.37 KB) - 1297 download(s)

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Economic and Fiscal Impacts of Florida Goodwill Association

Economic and Fiscal Impacts of Florida Goodwill Association

Goodwill’s Economic and Workforce Impact in Florida: FY 2024 quantifies how the Florida Goodwill Association and its nine territories convert donated goods and mission-driven operations into jobs, higher earnings, and stronger local economies across the state. Using FY 2024 operational, employment, and capital spending data and the IMPLAN input-output model, Florida TaxWatch estimates that Goodwill generated $1.52 billion in total economic output, added $893.9 million to Florida’s GDP, and supported 21,471 jobs statewide.

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