Fiscal impact reports (FIRs) are prepared by the Legislative Finance Committee (LFC) for standing finance
committees of the NM Legislature. The LFC does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of these reports
if they are used for other purposes.
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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Lujan, B.
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/3/07
3/22/07 HB
436/aHTRC/aSCORC/
aSFC
SHORT TITLE Working Families Tax Credit
SB
ANALYST Francis
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
($2,950)
($50,414)
($49,550) Recurring General Fund
(1,400)
Nonrecurring General Fund
380
493 Recurring
Local
Government
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Relates to SB482, SB317, HB833, HB973
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
Responses Received From
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
Human Services Department (HSD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SFC Amendment
The Senate Finance Committee proposes to amend House Bill 436 to add the following
provisions:
Disabled Street Vendor Gross Receipts: (duplicates a section of Senate Bill 317) This
provision creates a gross receipts tax exemption for the receipts from sale of goods by a disabled
street vendor. For the purposes of the provision, a person qualifies as disabled if they are blind,
permanently disabled with medical improvement not expected pursuant to 42 USCA 421 for the
purposes of the federal Social Security Act, or permanently and totally disabled pursuant to the
state Workers’ Compensation Act.
pg_0002
House Bill 436/aHTRC/aSCORC – Page
2
A street vendor is defined as a person licensed by a local government to sell tangible personal
property by newly setting up a sales site daily or selling from a movable cart, blanket, or other
device.
The effective date of these provisions will be July 1, 2007.
Low-income Housing Material Gross Receipts. (duplicates House Bill 833) An expansion of a
gross receipts and governmental gross receipts deduction granted in Section 7-9-60 NMSA 1978
to allow receipts from selling construction material or metalliferous mineral ore to a 501(c) (3)
organization organized to provide homeownership opportunities to low-income families to be
deducted.
The effective date of these provisions is July 1, 2007.
Armed Services Income Tax Exemption: (duplicates a section of Senate Bill 317) The Senate
Floor amendment exempts income earned from active duty service from the state personal
income tax. The effective date is January 1, 2007 so would apply for tax year 2007.
Middle Income Taxpayer Exemptions. (similar to House Bill 1254) An expansion of the
income thresholds for the exemption for middle-income taxpayers.
Begin
Phase-out Max Income
Begin Phase-
out Max Income
Current Law
24,000
$
40,667
$
16,000
$
27,110
$
HB436 as Amended
30,000
$
55,000
$
20,000
$
36,667
$
Married/Head of
Single
The exemption, $2,500 per claimed exemption, remains the same and phases-out at a rate of 20
percent for each additional dollar for married filing separately, 15 percent for singles and 10
percent for married filing jointly and head of household filers.
The exemption would be effective for tax years 2007 and beyond.
Special Needs Adoption Tax Credit/Repeal Exemption. (Similar to House Bill 973) The
proposed amendment enacts a new credit against personal income tax liability for taxpayers who
adopt a special needs child up to $1,000. The credit is refundable meaning if the credit exceeds
liability then the excess is refunded to the taxpayer. The credit can be claimed for each year that
the taxpayer claims the special needs child as a dependent on their federal income tax return.
The exemption that exists under current law is repealed for these costs.
A special needs adopted child is an individual (who may be over 18 years old) who is certified
by the Children Youth and Families Department (CYFD) as meeting the definition of “difficult
to place," with the caveat that if the classification is based on a physical or mental impairment or
an emotional disturbance that impairment or disturbance shall be at least moderately disabling.
The effective date is January 1, 2007.
Modifying Tax Penalties and Interest. (similar to House Bill 1251) amends provisions relating
to penalties and interest for incorrect and late tax payments.
pg_0003
House Bill 436/aHTRC/aSCORC – Page
3
repeals the “double local option" penalty imposed for misreporting the food and medical
services deductions and creates a tax credit for taxpayers who paid that penalty between
January 1, 2005 and July 1, 2007. The amount of the credit equal to the entire amount of
penalty paid. The credit must be claimed by July 1, 2010 and may be claimed against
gross receipts tax, compensating tax, or withholding tax. (effective July 1, 2007)
increases from $10 to $25 the minimum amount that a taxpayer must owe for TRD to
assess.
amend language to replace the current 15 percent interest charged when a taxpayer
underpays or overpays taxes with a rate established for individuals pursuant to Section
6621 of the Internal Revenue Code. That section of federal code sets the rate of interest
on underpaid taxes at the federal funds rate plus 3 percent, and sets the rate on interest on
overpaid taxes as the federal funds rate plus 3 percent or 2 percent if the taxpayer is a
corporation.
allows TRD up to 120 days to process a claim for refund on severance taxes before
interest would be earned by a taxpayer. Currently, TRD is allowed up to 60 days to
process a refund claim before interest is earned by the taxpayer.
increases the maximum penalty that may be assessed when a taxpayer fails to pay a tax
due to negligence or disregard for TRD rules from 10 to 20 percent of the amount of tax
due. The penalty will still be imposed at a rate of 2 percent per month up to the
maximum.
expands the $50 penalty for failing to file an information return on time pursuant to the
gasoline tax act to include wholesalers, retailers and rack operators. Currently, that
penalty applies only to “taxpayers."
The effective date of these provisions will be January 1, 2008 except as noted above.
Synopsis of SCORC Amendment
The Senate Corporations and Transportation Committee amended House Bill 436 clarifying that
only NM residents can claim the credit. The amendment also deletes a section referring to
married filing separate filers which was unnecessary as the federal earned income credit excludes
this filing category.
Synopsis of HTRC Amendment
The House Taxation and Revenue Committee amended House Bill 436 to make the credit
available even if a taxpayer has claimed a low-income comprehensive tax rebate. HTRC also
amended the percentage of the federal earned income credit to 8 percent, down from the original
10 percent.
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 436 creates a new personal income tax credit called the “Working Families Tax
Credit" (WFTC) that is calculated as 10 percent of the federal Earned Income Credit (EIC). The
credit is refundable, meaning if the credit exceeds the taxpayer’s liability, the excess is refunded
to the taxpayer. HB 436 also amends the low-income comprehensive tax rebate (LICTR) to
make a taxpayer ineligible for LICTR if the taxpayer receives the WFTC. HB436 also explicitly
pg_0004
House Bill 436/aHTRC/aSCORC – Page
4
excludes credits provided in the Income Tax Act from the calculation of modified gross income.
The effective date is January 1, 2007.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Recurring Revenue Impact
FY07 FY08 FY09
Working Families Credit
(29,100)
(30,000)
Recurring General Fund
*
*
Recurring General Fund
Recurring Local Government
(400)
(420)
Recurring General Fund
(267)
(280)
Recurring Local Government
Armed Forces Income Tax Exemption
(2,950)
(11,990)
(10,400)
Recurring General Fund
Middle Income Taxpayer Exemptions
(10,100)
(10,250)
Recurring General Fund
Special Needs Adoption Tax
Credit/Repeal Exemption
(540)
(540)
Recurring General Fund
1,716
2,055
Recurring General Fund
647
773
Recurrin
g
Local Government
TOTAL GENERAL FUND
(2,950)
(50,414)
(49,555)
Recurring General Fund
TOTAL LOCAL GOVERNMENT
0
380
493
Recurring Local Government
Disabled Street Vendor Sales Gross
Receipts
Low-income Housing Material Gross
Receipts
Modifying Tax Penalties and Interest
Working Families Tax Credit: Enacting this credit would reduce general fund personal income
tax revenue by $29.1 million per tax year based on $360 million in estimated federal EIC. Even
though the credit is for tax year 2007, it is assumed that it will be claimed in the filing season in
2008 and so all of the impact is in FY08. In 2004, 199,552 New Mexican taxpayers received the
federal EIC and 90 percent of the credits were in excess of liability.
Armed Services Income Tax Exemption: Exempting active duty salaries from personal income
tax would result in a $10 million reduction in personal income tax revenues going to the general
fund. Since the tax year straddles two fiscal years, the FY07 impact is $3 million, reflecting 30
percent of the tax year and the FY08 impact is $12 million, which include 70 percent of tax year
2007 and 50 percent of tax year 2008.
According to TRD, the fiscal impact is based on approximately 7,000 active duty military in
New Mexico earning an average $45,000 per year as well as an additional 3,000 active duty
National Guard and army reserve members. The average tax relief to service members would be
$1,350 and $133 for National Guard and army reserve members.
Disabled Street Vendor Gross Receipts: LFC and TRD believe the fiscal impact of this
provision will be small due to the limited number of disabled street vendors operating in New
Mexico.
Low-Income Housing Materials Gross Receipts. Based on information from federal tax
returns filed by New Mexico non-profit entities TRD estimates that 20 to 30 non-profit entities
operate in New Mexico each year to provide low-income homeownership opportunities. Total
pg_0005
House Bill 436/aHTRC/aSCORC – Page
5
income of these entities is about $30 million per year TRD assumes that $10 million of that
income is spent on construction materials and would be eligible for the proposed deduction.
Taxed at a statewide rate of 6.6 percent, the proposal would reduce gross receipts tax collections
by about $660 thousand. About 60 percent of that revenue decrease would accrue to the general
fund and the remaining 40 percent would accrue to local governments.
Middle-income Tax Exemption. Fiscal impacts were estimated using information from state
income tax returns. Increased exemptions will be claimed on an estimated 208 thousand tax
returns filed by New Mexico residents, claiming $10.1 million in tax savings for an average
savings per return of $48. Total tax savings due to the provision should be stable from year to
year because the amount of the exemption and the income thresholds are not indexed for
inflation. This means that as taxpayers’ incomes grow over time they will become eligible for a
smaller exemption amount. This effect will offset the increase in the total population eligible for
the exemptions.
Special Needs Adoption Tax Credit
TRD reports that the repeal of the exemption will have an insignificant impact. On the credit,
TRD has provided this analysis:
In tax year 2004, exemptions allowed under present law totaling approximately $1.2
million were claimed on slightly over 300 New Mexico tax returns, and thus averaged
approximately $4,000 per return. Taxpayers claiming the returns were subject to a tax
rate of slightly over 5 percent. Hence the resulting "tax cost" to the State of New Mexico
General Fund totaled approximately $60,000 (i.e., $1,200,000 x .05). The average tax
benefit was approximately $125 per child or 5% of $2,500.
The recurring impact shown above assumes 350 households with 600 special needs
children would get credits totaling $600 thousand per year for an average benefit of
$1,700 per household. The $540,000 recurring fiscal impact above is the difference
between the estimated $60,000 impact of the current program and the estimated $600,000
annual impact of the proposed statute.
Modifying Tax Penalties and Interest. TRD reports that in FY05, interest collections from
taxpayers who underpaid were about $20 million, while interest payments to taxpayers who
overpaid were about $3 million. Thus, lowering interest rates on under and overpayments will
result in a general fund revenue reduction. TRD expects general fund interest payments to fall by
$2,108 thousand in FY09 and by about $8,292 thousand in FY12, when the impact of lower
interest rates is expected to level off. Local governments will also lose revenue due to the lower
interest rates.
TRD reports that in FY05, penalty collections were about $8 million, 95 percent of which was
due to payments at the maximum rate of 10 percent. Increasing the maximum rate to 20 percent
is expected to increase penalty revenue in about 75 percent of taxpayer cases because taxpayers
will have more incentive to pay on time. Additional general fund revenue due to higher penalties
is expected to be about $5,454 thousand in FY09. Local governments will also gain revenue due
to higher penalties.
TRD reports that total penalties for the food and medical services deductions are about $1.4
million since the penalties were first imposed in January 2005. The credit would give all of those
penalties. This revenue reduction to the general fund will be nonrecurring.
pg_0006
House Bill 436/aHTRC/aSCORC – Page
6
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Working Families Tax Credit. Twenty states, including the District of Columbia, currently
offer a state level EIC (Colorado’s EIC is tied to their TABOR rules and so some years they do
not allow the credit). The credit has proven to be a simple and efficient credit. It is also popular
since it only goes to individuals and families with earned income. One of the key elements is the
refundability of the credit: the taxpayer receives the full amount of the credit regardless of the tax
liability. Twelve of the seventeen state EICs are refundable, according to research at the Institute
on Taxation and Economic Policy. New York and Vermont have the most generous EICs
allowing over 30 percent of the federal credit and making it refundable. Rhode Island has a 25
percent credit but it is not refundable which restricts its effectiveness.
TABLE 1: STATE EARNED INCOME TAX CREDITS BASED ON THE FEDERAL EITC
State
Percentage of Federal
Credit
(Tax Year 2006
Except as Noted)
Refundable
Workers Without
Qualifying Children
Eligible.
Delaware
20%
No
Yes
District of Columbia
35%
Yes
Yes
Indiana
a
6%
Yes
Yes
Illinois
5%
Yes
Yes
Iowa
6.5%
No
Yes
Kansas
15%
Yes
Yes
Maine
5%
No
Yes
Maryland
b
20%
Yes
No
Massachusetts
15%
Yes
Yes
Michigan
10% (effective in 2008; to
20% in 2009)
Yes
Yes
Minnesota
c
Average 33%
Yes
Yes
Nebraska
8%
Yes
Yes
New Jersey
d
20%
Yes
No
New York
e, f
30%
Yes
Yes
Oklahoma
5%
Yes
Yes
Oregon
5% (to 6% in 2008)
Yes
Yes
Rhode Island
25%
Partially
g
Yes
Vermont
32%
Yes
Yes
Virginia
20%
No
Yes
Wisconsin
4% - one child
4% - one child
No
14% - two children
14% - two children
43% - three children
43% - three children
pg_0007
House Bill 436/aHTRC/aSCORC – Page
7
TABLE 1: STATE EARNED INCOME TAX CREDITS BASED ON THE FEDERAL EITC
State
Percentage of Federal
Credit
(Tax Year 2006
Except as Noted)
Refundable
Workers Without
Qualifying Children
Eligible.
Notes: From 1999 to 2001, Colorado offered a 10% refundable EITC financed from required rebates under the state’s “TABOR" amendment.
Those rebates, and hence the EITC, were suspended beginning in 2002 due to lack of funds and again in 2005 as a result of a vot er-
approved five-year suspension of TABOR. Under current law, the EITC is projected to resume in 2010.
a Presently scheduled to expire in TY 2011.
b Maryland also offers a non-refundable EITC set at 50 percent of the federal credit. Taxpayers in effect may claim either the refundable
credit or the non-refundable credit, but not both.
c Minnesota’s credit for families with children, unlike the other credits shown in this table, is not expressly structured as a percentage of the
federal credit. Depending on income level, the credit for families with children may range from 25 percent to 45 percent of the federal credit;
taxpayers without children may receive a 25 percent credit.
d The New Jersey credit is available only to families with incomes below $20,000.
e The New York credit would be reduced automatically to the 1999 level of 20 percent should the federal government reduce New York’s
share of the TANF block grant.
f Beginning in 2006, New York also allows certain non-custodial parents who are making child support payments to claim an EITC that is the
greater of 20 percent of the federal EITC that they would be eligible for with one qualifying child as a custodial parent or 250 percent of the
federal EITC for taxpayers without qualifying children.
g Rhode Island made a very small portion of its EITC refundable effective in TY 2003. In 2006, the refundable portion was increased from 10
percent to 15 percent of the nonrefundable credit (i.e. 3.75 percent of the federal EITC).
Source: Economic Policy Institute (
www.epi.org
)
For a single or married taxpayer with no children, the cut-off for benefits is very low but for
taxpayers with children, the benefit goes to many more. The federal EIC can only be claimed if
someone is below the income cut-offs and
has a valid social security number
is not filing separately
is a US citizen or resident alien
does not have foreign income
does not have more than $2,800 in investment income
has some earned income.
Table one shows the cut-off and peak amounts and the maximum credit for each class of filer.
For example, a married filer with one child and adjusted gross income of between $8,000 and
$16,500 would receive the maximum federal credit of $2,747 (state credit = $275). The same
filer with income over $34,001 in adjusted gross income would receive no federal credit and,
thus, no state credit.
pg_0008
House Bill 436/aHTRC/aSCORC – Page
8
Table 1: Federal Income Cut-offs for Earned Income Credit
Maximum
Credit
Cut-off
Start Finish
Single
No children
12,120
5,500
6,500
412
One child
32,001
8,500
14,500
2747
More than one child
36,348
11,500
14,500
4536
Married
No children
14,120
5,500
8,500
412
One child
34,001
8,000
16,500
2747
More than one child
38,348
11,500
16,500
4536
Source: IRS 2006 Tax Year
Peak
Adjusted
Gross Income
For filers without children, they must be age 25 to 65, not a qualifying child or dependent of
another person and must have lived in the United States for more than six months. For filers
with children, the children must be younger than 19, younger than 25 if a full time student, or
permanently disabled. The children also have to have lived with the filer for more than six
months and cannot be claimed as a qualifying child or dependent of another person.
Figure Two: Working Families Tax Credit Phase-out
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
Source: TRD
One of the features of the EIC is that it phases-out at higher incomes. Figure two, which is based
on 2005 data, shows the maximum average credit of about $325, which would be $3,250 for the
federal EIC, is reached at an income level of $13,000. This is an average of all tax filers, whether
single or not or childless or not.
Disabled Street Vendor Gross Receipts: The Division of Vocational Rehabilitation notes that
since vendors are able to pass gross receipts tax on to their customers the provision does not
provide tax relief to disabled vendors. However, it will relieve disabled street vendors of the
responsibility to collect and pay the gross receipts tax.
pg_0009
House Bill 436/aHTRC/aSCORC – Page
9
Special Needs Adoption Credit. From Special-needs.adoption.com:
Over 100,000 children are waiting to be adopted right now out of the more than half
million US children in foster care. The rest will eventually be reunited with birth families
or will "age out" of the system while waiting to be reunited. Of the waiting children with
special needs who are younger than school age, many are of minority race, and all of
them are members of sibling groups, or have mild to severe disabilities, or are at risk of
developing disabilities later due to risk factors. Some children have correctable problems.
Others will "outgrow" their challenges. A few are remarkably resilient and will not
develop expected problems. However, adoptive parents must be ready to face and deal
with all types of outcomes, from the bleak to the near-miraculous.
[Cost of adoption]
The cost varies from place to place but the good news is that with careful planning,
special needs adoption can be a low-cost or no-cost process. Most expenses involved in
most of the authors' domestic special needs adoptions were reimbursed to them.
State or public adoption agencies do not usually charge for any special needs adoption
service. Fees at private adoption agencies for adoption services vary widely from no
charge at all to several thousand dollars, or more.
When a domestic special needs adoption takes place in a state offering "Purchase of
Services", the state with custody of the child may pay some or all of the private adoption
expenses for the adoptive parent or parents. This is how a private agency can afford to
operate without charging the family a home study or placement fee. Adoptive parents
should be sure and ask a private agency about "Purchase of Service adoptions."
In the U.S., up to $2,000 of a family's one-time special needs adoption expenses are
refundable for children who meet the requirements under the federal law. States may
allow up to $2,000 per child, or less, but not more. The expenses are reimbursed after the
adoption has been completed. Adoptive parents should keep receipts for all expenses
from the home study to the cost of photo listing book subscriptions. They should be sure
their agency participates in this refund program, and then be sure and request the
necessary forms after placement has occurred but before the adoption is legally finalized.
State and federal programs are also available to help parents with the cost of raising
adopted children with special needs.
Middle-income Taxpayer Exemption. The beneficiaries of the expansion of the thresholds are
those taxpayers who are above the current thresholds. For example, a head of household with
one child and $30,000 in adjusted gross income would deduct $5,000 from adjusted gross
income rather than $3,800 resulting in about $60 tax savings. As TRD points out below, the
phase out fixes a cliff that was in current law: under the formula for a married filing jointly
taxpayer, if the taxpayer has income of $41,000, they should receive an $800 exemption but the
law limits the exemption to those with $40,667 in income and so this taxpayer would not receive
a deduction. The figure below demonstrates the cliff for married filing jointly and heads of
household.
pg_0010
House Bill 436/aHTRC/aSCORC – Page
10
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
Adjusted Gross Income
HB436a
Curre nt Law
Modifying Tax Penalties and Interest. Taxpayers have protested to TRD that the 15 percent
interest imposed on underpayments is too high compared with current market rates. Currently,
the federal funds rate is about 5 percent. The federal government responded to this problem by
enacting Section 6621 of the Internal Revenue Code. That section allows interest on tax
underpayments to fluctuate as market interest rates fluctuate.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
SB317 is a related bill.
Similar to HB436, SB 482 creates a State Earned Income Tax Credit of 10 percent of the federal
EIC and SB482 also allows both the created credit and LICTR.
ADMINISTRATIVE ISSUES
Modifying Tax Penalties and Interest. TRD reports that changing the interest rate on
underpayments and overpayments of tax from a fixed 15 percent to a rate that moves with the
federal funds rate will require systems changes. TRD will change instructions and forms. If the
interest and penalty are changed effective July 1, 2008, then instructions for filing personal
income tax, corporate income tax, fiduciary tax and property tax returns will be incorrect for the
last half of 2008. Incorrect instructions will affect late filers and extension filers.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
Armed Services Income Tax Exemption: According to the Department of Defense, “Active
Duty" refers to “Full-time duty in the active service of a Uniformed Service, including fulltime
training duty, annual training duty, and attendance while in the active service at a school
designated as a Military Service school by law or by the Secretary concerned." SB492 refers to
“active service" which is presumed to mean “active duty" though clarification may be a
necessary correction.
TRD notes that, as written, the measure could be interpreted to include an exemption for federal
personal income tax obligations. It should be amended to clarify that it does not.
pg_0011
House Bill 436/aHTRC/aSCORC – Page
11
Disabled Street Vendor Gross Receipts: DVR believes the definition of “disabled" provided in
the provision will exclude individuals earning “substantial gainful activity," as defined by the
Social Security Act, which is equivalent to $900 per month for persons with disabilities and
$1,500 per month for those who are blind, from receiving the proposed gross receipts tax
exemption. DVR recommends amending the bill so the definition of disability matches that cited
in Section 504 of the federal Rehabilitation Act.
OTHER ISSUES
Armed Services Income Tax Exemption: By reducing state tax obligations, the proposed
measure would tend to increase federal tax liability because state tax obligations are deductible
against federal liability. Hence the net taxpayer benefit would be less than the $1,575 per
claimant mentioned above. The $1,575 in state tax savings would, for example, be reduced to
$1,260 ($1,575 x .8) for a taxpayer in the 20% federal tax bracket.
NF/mt