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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Gray
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/28/07
HB 1279
SHORT TITLE Taxpayer Dividends for General Fund Surpluses
SB
ANALYST Francis
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 1279 eliminates the taxpayer stabilization fund and changes the reserve requirements
of the general fund operating reserve to transfer fifty percent of the amount over 20 percent of
prior year appropriations directly to the taxpayer dividend fund. HB1279 requires that the
dividend fund be automatically distributed to taxpayers based on the number of federal
exemptions claimed in the previous year if the dividend per exemption is greater than $50.
The money that is currently in the taxpayer stabilization fund will automatically be distributed to
the taxpayer dividend fund upon enactment.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
There is not likely to be a fiscal impact as the reserve balance has not been over 20 percent of the
prior year’s appropriations in recent history and likely has never been. FY06 was close with a
reserve balance of 18 percent of FY05 recurring appropriations. The legislature and the governor
have tried to target the reserve balance, providing for capital outlay while still reserving an
adequate reserve.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The most significant issue with HB1279 is that it will likely need a super-majority (two-thirds of
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House Bill 1279 – Page
2
the members of each chamber) to be enacted due to the temporary provision for distributing the
funds in the taxpayer stabilization fund to the taxpayer dividend fund. This provision is in
Section 6-4-2.2 NMSA 1978 which is the section being repealed.
For there ever to be a dividend issued, the amount above 20 percent of prior year recurring
revenues would have to be at least $183 million. Assuming 1.83 million exemptions for FY07 at
$50 per exemption, at least $91.5 million would have to be in the dividend fund. Since half of
the excess over 20 percent is transferred, the amount over 20 percent would need to be at least
$183 million or 3.4 percent of FY06 recurring appropriations.
Under current law, if the operating reserve exceeds 8 percent of prior year recurring
appropriations, the amount above 8 percent is distributed to the taxpayer stabilization reserve. If
the balance in the taxpayer stabilization reserve is above 6 percent of prior year appropriations,
then the amount over 6 percent is transferred to the dividend fund. Then, if the balance of the
dividend fund exceeds 1 percent of prior year personal income tax revenues, “the governor shall
propose to the next session of the legislature a method for refunding the balance to the
taxpayers." [Section 6-4-5 NMSA 1978]
In FY06, the balance of the taxpayer stabilization fund was at 5.8 percent of FY05 recurring
appropriations indicating that a transfer to the dividend fund is a real possibility in the near
future. At least $10.8 million has to be transferred to trigger a dividend because FY06 personal
income tax revenue was $1.08 billion.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
HB 1279 does address a question that has come up in recent years regarding the process when
money is distributed to the taxpayer dividend fund. Current law, cited above, requires the
governor to propose a method for refunding the balance to the taxpayers but there is nothing that
requires the legislature to act on that proposal or that they cannot amend it. The funds in the
dividend fund can only be appropriated for refunds to taxpayers but there is no clear requirement
that they must be refunded. This bill sets out a formal process of distribution.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
On page 3, lines 19-21, the reference to “previous year’s total general fund appropriations and
other obligations of the general fund" would include nonrecurring appropriations, tobacco
program fund distributions and other appropriations from the other funds. Current law specifies
prior year recurring appropriations. If that was the intent, an amendment would be in order.
The dividend would be subject to federal income tax and likely be included as income for the
purpose of determining benefits.
NF/mt