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





SPONSOR: Garcia, M.P. DATE TYPED: 02/20/01 HB 741
SHORT TITLE: Tax Exemption for Alternative Fuel Vehicles SB
ANALYST: Eaton


REVENUE



Estimated Revenue
Subsequent

Years Impact

Recurring

or Non-Rec

Fund

Affected

FY01 FY02
(negative) (negative) Recurring General Fund-MVX
positive positive Recurring General Fund - GRCT
positive positive Recurring Local Govt. - GRCT



(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)



SOURCES OF INFORMATION



Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)



SUMMARY



Synopsis of Bill



This bill provides an exemption from the Motor Vehicle Excise Tax for alternative fuel vehicles. Alternative fuel vehicles are "vehicles that operate exclusively on alternative fuel, whether with a bi-fuel capability or dedicated engine configuration.



Alternative fuel means "natural gas, liquified petroleum gas, electricity, hydrogen, a fuel mixture containing not less than eighty-five percent ethanol or methanol or a water-phased hydrocarbon fuel emulsion consisting of a hydrocarbon base and water in an amount not less than twenty percent of volume of the total water-phased fuel emulsion."



FISCAL IMPLICATIONS



The Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD) estimate that this bill would actually increase revenue, the amount of which is indeterminate at this time.



Current law (Sections 7-9-22 and 7-9-23) exempt motor vehicles from the Gross Receipts Tax and the Compensating Tax (GR&CT) when the Motor Vehicle Excise Tax (MVX) has been paid. By exempting alternative fuel vehicles from the Motor Vehicle Excise Tax, the bill effectively imposes the GR&CT on these vehicles. The excise tax is levied at 3 percent, the GR&CT is levied at 5 percent (3.275 to the general fund, 1.225 local). Local option taxes would also be levied.



While the estimated impact is unknown, it would not be large as the increased tax would be a disincentive resulting in fewer vehicle sales.



ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS



Moderate.



TECHNICAL ISSUES



TRD suggests that the definition of bi-fuel be clarified.



OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES



Assuming an amendment is made to also exempt the gross receipts tax, TRD indicates that the magnitude of impact would depend on the interpretation of the definition of bi-fuel.



If bi-fuel means gasoline/ alternative fuel, the revenue losses would be significant, on the order of millions of dollars. TRD recommends that while the bill requires vehicles to operate "exclusively" on alternative fuels, "bi-fuel" could be interpreted as two alternative fuel types (i.e.

gasoline/alternative). The Taxation and Revenue Department indicate that they would not allow gasoline/alternative fuel engines to be exempt, they recommend a clarification in the bill for the benefit of the taxpayer.



The Taxation and Revenue Department's suggestion is well founded. Last year Arizona passed an extensive incentive for alternative fuel vehicles which, while being successful in stimulating alternative fuel (bi-fuel) vehicle purchases, resulted in catastrophic revenue losses and revealed a number of schemes designed to exploit the tax incentive.



The spirit of the Arizona law was to promote clean air. The "bi-fuel" inclusion (gasoline/alternative) actually resulted in people buying enormous Sport Utility Vehicles (SUV's) with a 3-5 gallon propane tank. The result was people bought vehicles that were less fuel efficient, primarily ran on gasoline that dirtied the air, and nearly shaved $800 million off of state government revenue in the process.



JBE/ar