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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Smith
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/25/07
2/25/07 HB
SHORT TITLE Local Option Compensating Taxes
SB 144/aSPAC
ANALYST Schardin
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
$6,260.7
Recurring Municipalities
$2,683.2
Recurring
Counties
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
$2,500.0
$2,500.0
Non-
Recurring
General
Fund
$1,000.0 $1,000.0 Recurring General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates HB 265, Conflicts with SB 205, Relates to SB 518, HB 374
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
New Mexico Municipal League (NMML)
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SPAC Amendment
The Senate Public Affairs Committee amendment to Senate Bill 144 widens the range of tangible
personal property that will be exempt from local option compensating taxes created by this bill.
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Senate Bill 144/aSPAC – Page
2
In the original bill, tangible personal property was exempt from the new taxes if it was subject to
depreciation for federal income tax purposes and
could not be obtained from sources within New
Mexico. The amendment changes the bill so that tangible personal property will be exempt from
the new taxes if it meets either
of these two conditions.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 144 imposes local option compensating taxes in counties and municipalities. Local
option compensating taxes will be imposed at the rate of any local option gross receipts tax in
effect in a county or municipality, and collected by TRD in the same manner as the current state
compensating tax.
Local option compensating taxes will be owed to the jurisdiction in which 1) the buyer’s place of
business is located if the buyer is engaging in business in New Mexico and uses the property in
furtherance of that business, 2) the buyer’s principal office is located if the buyer is a state or
local government agency, or 3) the buyer’s residence is located if the buyer is not engaging in
business in New Mexico.
Section 9 changes the timelines for local governments to hold an election to approve or
disapprove imposition of local option taxes. Currently, such an election must be held within five
months of the date when a local option tax would take effect. The bill reduces that timeline to
three months before a local option tax would take effect.
The original bill provides an exemption from local option compensating taxes for tangible
personal property that is subject to depreciation under federal income tax purposes and tangible
personal property that cannot be obtained from a source within New Mexico. The Senate Public
Affairs Committee amendment allows tangible personal property meeting either of these two
conditions to be exempt.
The bill will allow TRD to retain 3 percent of all local option compensating tax collections as an
administrative fee.
The bill has an effective date of July 1, 2007 (see Technical Issues).
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
TRD estimates the statewide compensating tax base will be about $1,577.5 million in FY08, and
the statewide weighted average local option tax rate will be 1.67 percent. TRD roughly estimates
that 65 percent of this base will be eligible for the local option compensating tax exemptions
provided in the bill. This suggests that total local option compensating taxes will be about $9.2
million in FY08 (1,577.5 million X .35% eligible X 1.67% tax rate). Three percent of this
amount, or $276.6 thousand, will be retained by TRD as an administrative fee. Of the remaining
$8.9 million, TRD estimates 70 percent ($6.3 million) will go to municipalities and 30 percent
($2.7 million) will go to counties.
The compensating tax base that will be subject to local option compensating taxes is expected to
grow by 5 percent per year.
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Senate Bill 144/aSPAC – Page
3
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
This bill makes the compensating tax rate equivalent to the gross receipts tax rate to eliminate an
incentive for New Mexico buyers to purchase goods from out-of-state vendors. According to
NMML, New Mexico businesses are currently at a disadvantage with out-of-state businesses
because the compensating tax paid on goods and services from out-of-state is lower than the
statewide gross receipts tax rate, which includes both a statewide tax and several local option
taxes.
The bill will provide an additional stream of revenue to counties and municipalities that are
currently very dependent on gross receipts tax collections. However, some local option gross
receipts taxes are earmarked for specific uses. It is unclear whether some of these specific uses
will be able to make use of more funding.
Local option gross receipts taxes that will be mirrored with new local option compensating taxes
if the bill is enacted include the supplemental municipal gross receipts tax, the municipal local
option gross receipts tax, the local hospital gross receipts tax, the county local option gross
receipts tax, and the county correctional facility gross receipts tax.
The bill allows an exemption from local option compensating taxes for certain tangible personal
property that may depreciated for federal income tax purposes and tangible personal property
that cannot be obtained within New Mexico. According to TRD, federal income tax guidelines
allow most types of tangible property, such as buildings, machinery, vehicles, and furniture to be
depreciated.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
TRD reports that this bill creates major administrative impacts. A new full-page CRS form will
be necessary for TRD to distribute local option compensating taxes to local governments. This,
in turn, would require at least four scanners at a cost of about $550 thousand each ($2.2 million
non-recurring) and maintenance for each scanner of about $160 thousand each ($640 thousand
recurring). Finally, five additional FTE would be required to enter data and verify distributions.
The salaries, benefits, and other recurring costs associated with these five FTE are estimated to
be $250 thousand. Without these additional resources, local option compensating tax
distributions would likely be late. The bill awards TRD an administrative fee for collection of the
new local option compensating taxes. This administrative fee should cover the recurring
administrative costs imposed on TRD by the bill, but will not be sufficient to pay for the
nonrecurring costs of purchasing scanners.
TRD notes that because the local option compensating tax exemptions for tangible personal
property that can be depreciated for federal income tax purposes and tangible personal property
that cannot be obtained in New Mexico do not also apply to the statewide compensating tax,
administration will be more complex. Taxpayer reporting would be simpler if these exemptions
were eliminated or if they also applied to the state compensating tax.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Senate Bill 144 duplicates House Bill 265.
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Senate Bill 144/aSPAC – Page
4
Senate Bill 144 conflicts with Senate Bill 205, which also amends Section 7-20C-2 NMSA 1978.
Senate Bill 205 amends this section to include Union County in the list of counties that may
impose a local hospital gross receipts tax.
Senate Bill 144 relates to Senate Bill 518 and House Bill 374, which would create new local
option gross receipts taxes that would be mirrored by local option compensating taxes if Senate
Bill 144 is enacted. Senate Bill 518 creates a county senior citizen services gross receipts tax and
House Bill 374 creates a municipal higher education facilities gross receipts tax.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
TRD noted the following technical issues:
Major computer systems changes will be necessary to make the appropriate local revenue
distributions. Reprogramming the system is possible but is estimated to take 3,000 FTE hours.
The July 1, 2007 effective date contained in the bill does not give TRD enough time to make
these changes.
The bill provides that where a local gross receipts tax is in effect on July 1, 2007 the
corresponding local compensating tax is automatically imposed at the same rate. If the local
gross receipts tax was adopted by a vote of the electorate, the subsequent addition of local option
compensating tax may be vulnerable to challenge because it falls outside the scope of the ballot
questions approved by voters.
The bill will cause some conflicts with various tax laws that refer only to local option gross
receipts taxes. For example, many tax credits, such as the investment tax credit found in Section
7-9A-8 NMSA 1978, restrict the amount of credit that may be applied against local option gross
receipts taxes.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Equalizing gross receipts and compensating tax rates would help New Mexico comply with
future requirements of participation in the Streamlined Sales Tax Agreement.
A similar bill was passed by the legislature and vetoed by the governor in 2005 (HB 581). The
governor’s veto message stated that the bill was vetoed because it was “riddled with exemptions
that might unfairly subject certain entities to the tax but not others." Senate Bill 144 contains
exemptions for tangible personal property that may be depreciated for federal income tax
purposes and for tangible personal property that cannot be obtained in New Mexico, but these
exemptions apply in to all industries rather than the handful that were listed in the 2005 bill.
SS/csd:nt