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Overview
To schedule an interview with one of our analysts or get help with other questions, please contact Caitlin Highland, our Communications Director at 404-583-0583 or via email at chighland@gbpi.org.
Georgia revenue collections drop again amid talk of budget, tax cuts
The state received disappointing tax collections for a fifth consecutive month in November. An earlier
Georgia agencies’ plans to reduce budgets heavy on job, pay cuts
Gov. Brian Kemp’s administration says layoffs should be the last resort for state agencies trying
To keep growing the economy, Georgia leaders must protect our state’s main source of funding
Next year, lawmakers will consider legislation that could threaten Georgia’s ability to remain economically competitive
Kemp wants Georgia agency heads to skip budget hearings
Georgia legislative leaders scheduled meetings later this month to hear how state agencies plan to
Georgia Medicaid agency plans $10 million in admin cuts per Kemp plan
The state agency that oversees programs that deliver health care to about a quarter of
Report: A new cut in Georgia income tax would mean little to many
State lawmakers have seldom seen a tax cut they didn’t vote for, but legislators will
Georgia governor orders all state agencies to make sweeping budget cuts
Georgia’s governor has ordered all state agencies to slash their budgets by 4% this year
Local Macon Advocacy Group Hosts Training Event
GBPI joined several groups including the New Georgia Project (NGP), WIC and the Macon Bibb
State officials get update on health care waivers
Georgia has a high rate of people without health insurance, and it’s statistically below average
Amid Low Unemployment in Macon, Mile-long Job Fair Line Tells Different Story
More than 3,500 job hunters stood in a line a mile long, and some continued to
State picks Deloitte to craft waiver plan on health coverage
The state said Monday that it has picked Deloitte Consulting as the winner of
Study: Georgia’s shortcomings threaten to undermine economic growth
Despite decades of sometimes spectacular growth, a new study warns Georgia cannot afford to ignore