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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Stewart
DATE TYPED 02/11/05 HB 844
SHORT TITLE Heads Of Household Income Tax Relief
SB
ANALYST Padilla-Jackson
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue
Subsequent
Years Impact
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
($1,250.0)* ($2,240.0)
($1,840.0) Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
* Due to the assumed effective date, FY05 would only accrue half of a full-year benefit.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 844 amends the Income Tax Act to provide tax relief to heads of households. The
bill would apply the same income tax rate structure currently applied to married individuals fil-
ing joint returns to heads of household. One major change is that the bill would allow a head of
household to qualify for the lower tax rate structure earning slightly higher income. The present
and newly proposed tax rate structures are summarized in the table below.
pg_0002
House Bill 844 -- Page 2
Proposed Income Tax Rates for Heads of Household
If Taxable Income Is:
The Tax Shall Be:
Taxable Year beginning in 2005 Taxable Year beginning in 2006 Taxable Year beginning on or after 2007
< $8,000 1.7% of Taxable Income
1.7% of Taxable Income
1.7% of Taxable Income
$8,000 > $16,000 $136 plus 3.2% of excess over $8,000 $136 plus 3.2% of excess over $8,000 $136 plus 3.2% of excess over $8,000
$16,000 > $24,000 $392 plus 4.7% of excess over $16,000 $392 plus 4.7% of excess over $16,000 $392 plus 4.7% of excess over $16,000
> $24,000 $768 plus 6% of excess over $24,000 $768 plus 5.3% of excess over $24,000 $768 plus 4.9% of excess over $24,000
Existing Tax Rates for Heads of Household
If Taxable Income Is:
The Tax Currently is:
Taxable Year beginning in 2005 Taxable Year beginning in 2006 Taxable Year beginning on or after 2007
< $7,000 1.7% of Taxable Income
1.7% of Taxable Income
1.7% of Taxable Income
$7,000 > $14,000 $119 plus 3.2% of excess over $7,000 $119 plus 3.2% of excess over $7,000 $119 plus 3.2% of excess over $7,000
$14,000 > $20,000 $343 plus 4.7% of excess over $14,000 $343 plus 4.7% of excess over $14,000 $343 plus 4.7% of excess over $14,000
> $20,000 $625 plus 5.3% of excess over $20,000 $625 plus 5.3% of excess over $20,000 $625 plus 4.9% of excess over $20,000
Example of Savings
Annua l Sala ry
$22,000
Taxable Year beginning in 2005 Taxable Year beginning in 2006 Taxable Year beginning on or after 2007
Existing Rates
$731
$731
$723
Proposed Rates
$674
$674
$674
Total Annual Savings
$57
$57
$49
$28,000
Taxable Year beginning in 2005 Taxable Year beginning in 2006 Taxable Year beginning on or after 2007
Existing Rates
$1,049
$1,049
$1,017
Proposed Rates
$1,008
$980
$964
Total Annual Savings
$41
$69
$53
No effective date was specified, however, the TRD fiscal impact assumes 90 days after adjourn-
ment, applicable for tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2005.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The total fiscal impact, based on analysis provided by TRD, is -$2,240.0 to the general fund in
FY06. According to their analysis, annual New Mexico income tax obligations of head of
household filers totaled approximately $53 million in tax year 2003. Simulations based on the
2003 return data indicate that tax reductions associated with the proposed measure are likely to
total approximately $2.5 million in tax year 2005 (or approximately $2.2 million for FY05),
$1.98 million in tax year 2006 (or approximately , $2.2 million in FY06) and $1.7 million in tax
year 2007 (or approximately $1.8 million in FY07). Note FY06 is made up of proceeds from
one half of tax year 2005 and one half of tax year 2006. TRD notes that tax benefits of the pro-
posed measure would decrease as the maximum personal income tax rates were scheduled to fall
from 6.0 percent in tax year 2005 to 4.9 percent in tax year 2007.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
TRD believes that the provisions of the bill could be administered with resources currently avail-
able to the department.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
According to TRD, the proposal would benefit approximately 121,500 individuals. The average
benefit per return would be approximately $38. Treating single heads of household in the same
way as married couples would address equity (fairness) concerns.
pg_0003
House Bill 844 -- Page 3
TRD notes that, on average, incomes of individuals filing head of household returns are substan-
tially below those who file married joint. In tax year 2003, approximately 143,000 taxpayers
filed head of household returns. 52,000 head-of-household filers (about one-third) reported tax-
able income in excess of $7,000. In contrast, of the approximately 320,000 joint returns filed for
2003, roughly 227,800, or 70 percent, reported taxable income in excess of $7,000.
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