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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Sandoval
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/26/07
HB 1254
SHORT TITLE Low and Middle Income Taxpayer Exemptions
SB
ANALYST Francis
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
(19,100.0)
(19,100.0) Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 1254 expands the income thresholds for the exemption for low- and middle-income
taxpayers.
Be
g
in Phase-
out Max Income Begin Phase-out Max Income
Be
g
in Phase-
out Max Income
Current Law
24,000
$
40,667
$
16,000
$
27,110
$
12,000
$
20,333
$
HB1254
36,000
$
61,000
$
24,000
$
40,667
$
18,000
$
30,500
$
Married/Head of
Household
Single
Married Filing
Separately
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.
pg_0002
House Bill 1254 – Page
2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
TRD estimates the fiscal impact to be $19.1 million in FY08:
Fiscal impacts were estimated using information from state income tax returns. Increased
exemptions will be claimed on an estimated 236 thousand tax returns filed by New
Mexico residents, claiming $18.5 million in tax savings for an average savings per return
of $78. Non-resident taxpayers will claim an estimated $700 thousand in tax savings.
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.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The average tax relief per return is $78 as shown in the table below:
Married
Joint Single
Head of
Household
Married
Separate All Returns
Average Tax Relief $118 $43
$78
$57
$78
Source: TRD
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.
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
Adjusted Gross Income
HB1254
Current Law
pg_0003
House Bill 1254 – Page
3
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
TRD:
The following figure displays tax savings per return as a function of Adjusted Gross
Income (“AGI") for all taxpayers under the present law personal exemption and with the
proposed changes in House Bill 1254. As the figure shows, the present law benefits are
subject to a “cliff" because benefits are truncated by the limit on AGI before the formula
reduces the benefit to zero. For households eligible for benefits under present law, the
additional benefits due to House Bill 1254 are shown in the figure as the areas above their
present benefit, i.e. the height of the “Proposed Law" line represents total combined
benefits for these households, not the incremental benefits due to House Bill 1254.
Savings Per Return by Income Group:
All Taxpayers
$0
$20
$40
$60
$80
$100
$120
$140
$160
$180
Adjusted Gross Income
Present Law
Proposed Law
NF/csd