OHIO SMALL BUSINESSES Tax cut goes largely unclaimed


Associated Press

COLUMBUS

A tax cut for small business-owners in Ohio hasn’t been claimed as much as expected, leading some to shell out hundreds of millions in taxes that state law didn’t require them to pay.

Republicans including Gov. John Kasich have promoted the tax deduction as a way to help small businesses expand. Owners could take a 50 percent tax deduction on up to $250,000 of income for 2013.

The Columbus Dispatch reported that just 379,000 business filers took the tax deduction as of Oct. 19. That’s roughly half of the 717,000 filers the state’s Department of Taxation anticipated when the GOP-dominated Legislature passed the tax break in June 2013.

The newspaper reports that those business filers saved $287 million in income tax. That’s below the $533 million in projected savings. The average filer — those entities whose profit and income are one in the same — saved about $760. Most claimed the deduction on less than $40,000 worth of business income, providing average tax savings of less than $150. A fraction had incomes topping $180,000, with an average savings of nearly $6,000.

Gary Gudmundson, spokesman for the state’s tax department, said it’s too early to tell why the numbers fell short of the expectation.