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Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, center, talks with Senate Majority Leader Ronnie Chance, R-Tyrone, this week in the Senate chamber of the Capitol. Georgia is not a major player in venture capital, the high-risk, high-reward investment vehicles often critical to the launch of successful technology startups, but that will change if Cagle gets his way.

With Georgia’s promising technology center still hamstrung by a lack of cash, Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle is pushing legislation to combine state money and private dollars into a new venture capital fund. It could be a game-changer for the kind of jobs the state covets, but it also comes with high risk.

Cagle’s proposal would dedicate $100 million in state money over the next five years to the fund, which would be overseen by an independent investment board. To do so, the state would offer up either tax credits or draw from its OneGeorgia fund, which it uses to seed economic development.

The board would recruit large venture capital firms to throw private money into the pot. It would then choose which startups to invest money in. If all goes well, based on each contract, it would recoup its original investment plus 80 percent of profits — which would go back into the fund. The firms would get the remaining 20 percent.

To read the full, original article click on this link: Is Georgia ready to fund venture capital? | www.ajc.com