Manufacturing advocate: ‘Follow the actions’ with Pritzker on taxes
(The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker says he prefers growing the economy over raising taxes, but a small and midsize manufacturers’ advocate says the governor’s actions don’t follow his words.
The governor suggested last week that the General Assembly could undo tax benefits provided by the federal government’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act in order to fill a projected $267 million state deficit.
On Tuesday, Pritzker said he preferred economic growth over cutting spending or raising taxes.
“You’ve got to balance the budget. There’s no doubt about it. I prefer growing the economy to the other two methods,” Pritzker told The Economic Club of Chicago.
David Curtin, a Springfield lobbyist for the Schaumburg-based Technology and Manufacturing Association, said the governor uses the right words.
“If you follow the actions, this action would not follow those words, but he would wordsmith it in some other way,” Curtin told The Center Square.
Curtin said Pritzker wants to get rid of the Big Beautiful Bill provision giving manufacturers a 100% bonus depreciation of equipment and machinery in the first year.
“That would help manufacturers quite a bit, and manufacturers will realize that this year. It’ll go into effect because Illinois is automatically tethered to the federal law, unless the legislature does something about it and cuts us out of the process,” Curtin explained.
The Governor’s Office of Management and Budget released the annual Illinois Economic and Fiscal Policy Report on Oct. 9.
“GOMB projects that H.R. 1’s negative impact on business tax collections will outweigh these gains. General Funds revenues are now projected to be net $449 million lower than earlier estimates due to an estimated $830 million reduction in state tax revenue in FY2026 due largely to automatic state tax law conformity with federal corporate tax cuts,” the governor’s press release accompanying the report noted.
Curtin said other states are welcoming the federal government’s tax benefits because they help manufacturers grow and invest.
William McBride, chief economist and Stephen J. Entin Fellow in Economics at the Tax Foundation, said the Big Beautiful Bill’s depreciation provision allows immediate write-offs aimed at manufacturing and production. In the past, McBride said businesses could wait as long as 39 years to write off investments in structures like factories.
“A manufacturing business has to have a manufacturing facility, or they’re not a manufacturing business” McBride said. “They have to lay out the millions of dollars to build that facility. That’s core to their business.”
McBride said the provision helps cut the inflation risk out of businesses’ tax liabilities and helps offset the cost of waiting to get deductions.
“The time value of money and inflation mean this is very much going to be an incentive for businesses to invest in particular in factories and manufacturing facilities,” the Tax Foundation economist explained.
McBride said the provision is not a carve-out.
“Think about this as just righting a wrong that has existed in the tax code since the beginning of the income tax. That’s the way I would characterize it. I would absolutely not characterize it as a carve-out,” McBride said.
McBride said Illinois would be at a competitive disadvantage if it did not conform to the federal law.
Latest News Stories

Poll: Kamala Harris still Democratic favorite for 2028

New York Dems seek to withhold federal taxes over funding cuts

Congressional Conflicts: Stock ban pits affluent, super rich

Supreme Court to consider drug user gun possession case

Illinois quick hits: Davis Gates selected to lead IFT; new veterans facilities in Quincy

Everyday Economics: Economic expansions rarely die of old age

Poll: Vance, Trump Jr. early favorites to win GOP nod for next president

D.C. leads thousands of ‘No Kings’ protests nationwide

Experts weigh in on fight over Obamacare premium tax credit extension

Republican support slipping ahead of midterm elections, poll shows

Poll: Americans support Antifa terror designation

Electronics retailer asks Supreme Court to quell tariff chaos
