People-Powered Prosperity
People-Powered Prosperity
It is clearer than ever before that our state’s economy is not inclusive of every Georgian–and our entire state suffers as a result. People-Powered Prosperity details a vision for how state lawmakers can pursue strategies to help Georgians recover and thrive, as well as how the state can responsibly pay for the services our families rely on.
Our state boasts a successful business community and an attractive place to work, but problems and barriers across Georgia persist, including poverty, sky-high costs for college and child care, the maternal mortality crisis and inequities among women and people of color. These problems existed before COVID-19, but the pandemic has underscored them. Recovery is only possible if we invest in every Georgian and ensure no one is left out.
This campaign, led by GBPI, 9to5 Georgia, Faith in Public Life and Small Business Majority, offers policy solutions to these issues and explains how Georgia can fund statewide prosperity. During the 2023 Legislative Session, several PPP priorities advanced through the Legislature, and though this campaign will end in 2023, the work towards advancing a proactive revenue agenda and policies that strengthen economic security for Georgians continues.
Read our latest progress report here.

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The Roadmap to People-Powered Prosperity Runs Through Four Key Pillars

Thriving Families

Healthy Communities

Educated Youth

A Strong Workforce
Georgia Can Afford an Ambitious Investment in its People
Fully funding our state’s shared priorities requires balancing Georgia’s state budget with sustainable revenue sources that fairly tax residents across the state. It is also important to reverse tax policies that cause the lowest-income families to pay the highest percentage of their earnings in state and local taxes and to make certain that the state avoids costly and inefficient loopholes or unnecessary tax breaks.
By modernizing the state’s tax code and implementing common-sense policies with demonstrated success in other states across the nation, Georgia’s leaders can both increase the state’s ability to fund its priorities and more equitably tax households. In order to achieve this goal, state leaders can:
- Preserve and strengthen the income tax for households and corporations by defending against cuts that largely benefit top earners and scaling back the double deduction to stabilize revenues and recover quickly during times of economic downtown
- Evaluate tax breaks for big business in order to trim back those that do not deliver enough benefit to offset the state’s lost revenue
- Increase the cigarette tax to the national average in order to raise over $500 million in annual revenues while discouraging tobacco use
- Extend the sales tax to cover all online purchases and some services
Recent Work
CARES Act to Deliver Booster Shot of Additional Relief to Families, Economy Amid COVID-19 Crisis
Jennifer Owens
April 1, 2020
Key Takeaways The Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) passed by Congress is a $2.2 ...
Georgia Won’t Thrive if People Don’t Survive
Taifa Smith Butler
March 31, 2020
Key Takeaways: Years of disinvestment, poor public health infrastructure and systemic barriers have exposed Georgians’ vulnerability—particularly for those ...
It is Time to Bolster Georgia’s Unemployment Insurance System
Alex Camardelle
March 24, 2020
As of March 26, 2020, the Department of Labor has extended the Unemployment Insurance benefits duration to 26 ...
GBPI Letter Urges Governor, State Leaders to Remove Barriers to SNAP During Pandemic
Taifa Smith Butler
March 18, 2020
Dear Governor Kemp, It is commendable that Georgia is taking proactive and necessary steps to fight the spread ...
Fighting COVID-19 in Georgia With Medicaid and New Funding
Laura Harker
March 18, 2020
The first cases of novel coronavirus (COVID-19) in Georgia were reported on March 3, 2020, and the number ...
A Flat Tax is Wrong for Georgia
Danny Kanso
March 11, 2020
Sharp Revenue Losses, Middle-Class Tax Increases Pay for Big Tax Cuts for Top Earners Members of the Georgia ...