The Mills Bill: An Economic Impact Study of the North Carolina State Historic Mill Rehabilitation Tax Credit

Abstract

The textile, tobacco, and furniture industries in North Carolina suffered a significant loss of revenue and jobs in the 1990s. As production migrated to cheaper locations overseas, communities throughout the state faced the collateral challenge of finding new uses for hundreds of large, empty mill buildings. To encourage redevelopment of the state\u27s vacant mills, North Carolina\u27s legislature created a tax credit program that targeted mills and other similar industrial properties. This thesis quantifies the economic successes of the state\u27s mill rehabilitation tax credit. Building on equations and assumptions from Becky Holton\u27s 2008 IMPLAN software model, this economic impact study uses individual project data from the North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office, including qualified rehabilitation expenditures, to determine the level of economic development for each year of the program\u27s existence from 2006 to 2013. Significant findings include total rehabilitation expenditures, direct and indirect jobs created, direct and indirect income taxes generated, sales taxes generated, increased property taxes, eligible tax credit amounts, and the overall cost to the state of North Carolina. An analysis using a second multiplier from Donovan Rypkema of PlaceEconomics also demonstrates the indirect effects of the mill credit by estimating the economic impact, total jobs created, and household income associated with every one million dollars of investment in mill rehabilitation projects. By comparing annual results, this economic impact study demonstrates the tax credit\u27s increased efficiency and use in rehabilitating mills and revitalizing North Carolina communities. The North Carolina mill tax credit program has proved successful in finding new uses for vacant mill buildings and infusing economic energy into communities hit by loss of manufacturing jobs. While the administration of the credit creates a deduction in the state budget, the mill credit\u27s indirect economic impact on the state far exceeds the government\u27s initial investment. Although less than a third of completed mill rehabilitation projects took place outside of the state\u27s strong, urban markets, the mill credit has so far pushed 24 projects into feasibility. The future of the historic mill rehabilitation tax credit program faces renewal by the North Carolina state legislature in 2014

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