NOTE: As provided in LFC policy, this report is intended for use by the standing finance committees of the legislature.  The Legislative Finance Committee does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of the information in this report when used in any other situation.



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





SPONSOR: Nava DATE TYPED: 03/16/01 HB
SHORT TITLE: Allocation of Nonresident Border Income SB 541/aSFl #1/aHTRC
ANALYST: Williams


REVENUE (See Text)



Estimated Revenue
Subsequent

Years Impact

Recurring

or Non-Rec

Fund

Affected

FY01 FY02
$ (150.0) $ (500.0) Recurring General Fund



(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)



SOURCES OF INFORMATION

LFC Files

Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)



SUMMARY



Synopsis of HTRC Amendment



The House Taxation and Revenue Committee amendment strikes the technical fix of the incre-mental payroll increase calculation, and inserts new language to deal with the technical issue. Qualification is based on the first month of the current year for new and existing businesses compared to previous year's first month payroll. The attached TRD fir contains a timeline of events and timing of fiscal impacts pursuant to the HTRC qualifications. The amendment also extends the effective date to January 1, 2002.



Synopsis of SFl #1 Amendment



The Senate Floor No. 1 amendment extends the qualifying zone by five miles to 20 miles from the international border and clarifies a technical issue.



Synopsis of Original Bill



The bill would expand the income allocation and apportionment language in current statute to authorize compensation to be allocated to the taxpayers' state of residence for certain businesses. The language would be effective beginning tax year 2001. To qualify, a manufacturing business would pay compensation for activities, labor or services performed when the business has at least 5 full time employees in New Mexico and is located within 15 miles of an international border with either:



Significant Issues



If a qualifying plant were built in Santa Teresa, employees from Texas could apportion their wage and salary income to Texas, which does not have a personal income tax. The bill sets a precedent for exempting from taxation the wages of non-New Mexicans who work in the state.

FISCAL IMPLICATIONS



Synopsis of HTRC Amendment



TRD now reflects the potential cost of the bill as reducing recurring general fund revenues by $150.0 in FY 02, $500.0 in FY03 and $1,000.0 for a subsequent full year impact. TRD notes "although the HTRC amendments clarify the concept, they do not materially decrease the general fund exposure".



Note that just one major plant relocation involving hundreds of employees could reduce general fund revenues by more than $1,000.0 annually. To be certain of the maximum fiscal impact, the legislation could be amended to include a cap.



Synopsis of SFl #1 Amendment



The revenue loss is calculated at $1,200 per Texas employee per year, assuming an average weekly wage of $700. Net general fund revenue loss is projected by TRD at $500.0 and $1,000.0 in FY02 and FY03, respectively.



Synopsis of Original Bill



Note that just one major plant relocation involving hundreds of employees could reduce general fund revenues by more than $1,000.0 annually. To be certain of the maximum fiscal impact, the legislation could be amended to include a cap.



ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS



TRD notes minimal impacts.



TECHNICAL ISSUES



TRD notes:





OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES



TRD believes the legislation is directed to one plant per year, and has evaluated the fiscal impact accordingly. TRD notes the bill may violate the constitutional prohibition on local or special legislation (Article IV, Section 24).



AW/ar

Attachment