
Media Contact
Jennifer Ellen French
Public Relations Manager
Andrew Young School of Policy Studies
[email protected]
ATLANTA—Three Georgia regions experienced double-digit declines in sales tax distributions in the June quarter during the coronavirus pandemic, according to an online interactive data tool created by Georgia State University’s Fiscal Research Center (FRC).
The tool allows users to explore year-over-year changes in sales tax distributions at the county, regional or state level—by commodity—from January 2016 through June 2020. The sales tax data, provided by the Georgia Department of Revenue, will be updated monthly.
“Illustrating the effects of the coronavirus slowdown in the second quarter, the tool shows eight of the 12 planning regions of the state saw declines in sales tax distributions compared to the same period a year earlier. Three of them experienced declines of more than 10 percent,” said economist Robert Buschman, associate director of the FRC.
Sales taxes account for a significant share of revenues for local governments and schools, providing a useful measure of economic strength. Many governments use data on sales tax distributions to plan their annual budgets.
Policymakers, government leaders and other users can use this tool to gain a better understanding of the level of sales activity in a county, region or statewide at a granular scale.
“For most governments, sales taxes are not only an important revenue source, they also serve as an indicator of economic vitality,” Buschman said.
He developed the tool with FRC research associate Chris Thayer.
Access the FRC’s sales tax distribution tool online at https://frc.gsu.edu/georgia-sales-tax-distributions/.
Featured Researcher
Robert Buschman
Associate Director
Fiscal Research Center
Robert Buschman serves as associate director for FRC and is a senior research associate with the Fiscal Research Center (FRC) and the Center for State and Local Finance. He is FRC’s key contact for fiscal note analyses of proposed Georgia revenue legislation. His research interests include corporate and personal taxation, growth and equity effects of tax reform, state and local fiscal policy, and other topics. He also has taught principles of and intermediate, macroeconomics at Georgia State University. Prior to joining the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, Buschman worked for several years in corporate banking and corporate financial management. He holds a bachelor’s degree in economics from Duke University, an MBA in finance from the Goizueta Business School at Emory University, and a master’s degree and doctorate in economics from the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University.