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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T





SPONSOR: Wright DATE TYPED: 02/12/01 HB 442
SHORT TITLE: Tax Deduction from Sale of Prosthetic Devices SB
ANALYST: Eaton


REVENUE



Estimated Revenue
Subsequent

Years Impact

Recurring

or Non-Rec

Fund

Affected

FY01 FY02
positive/unknown positive/unknown Recurring General Fund
positive/unknown positive/unknown Recurring Local Govt.

(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)



Relates to many bills affecting all segments of health care taxation



SOURCES OF INFORMATION



Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)



SUMMARY



Synopsis of Bill



This bill makes the current limited gross receipts tax deduction for prosthetic devices complete, but restricts the definition of "prosthetic device" to exclude artificial hands and feet, dacron veins and arteries, artificial hips, cornea replacement, pacemakers & dental implants. By prohibiting the deduction for prosthetic devices that do not replace a limb, this proposal is a tax increase. Offsetting the new tax imposed on some prosthetic devices, receipts from wholesale and retail sales of artificial limbs will become deductible.



FISCAL IMPLICATIONS



The Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD) cannot determine the fiscal impact of this bill. TRD reports that by prohibiting the deduction for prosthetic devices that do not replace a limb, this proposal is a tax increase, in aggregate.



ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS



Minimal.





TECHNICAL ISSUES



The Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD) report that the definition of "prosthetic device" as a "artificial replacement of a limb" - is contrary to the common definition. Dental implants, artificial hands and feet, dacron veins and arteries, artificial hips, plastic corneas, pacemakers, would not only not be deductible at the final sale to the patient, but could lose the wholesale deduction that allows the doctor to purchase the artificial body parts without tax by issuing an NTTC to the medical supplies wholesaler.



Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary defines a prosthesis as "an artificial device to replace a missing part of the body". Thus, hearing aids, eyeglasses and contact lens, which aid body function, but which are not replacements for missing body parts, are not prostheses. An implanted plastic contact lens used to replace a cornea would be an eligible prosthesis, as would dental implants.



JBE/njw