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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Beffort
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/30/07
3/13/07 HB
SHORT TITLE
Agricultural Water Conservation Tax Credits
SB 291/aSCORC
ANALYST Francis
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
($6,250.0)
($8,950.0) Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
Department of Agriculture Census of State and Local Agriculture
Responses Received From
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SCORC Amendment
The Senate Corporations and Transportation Committee made several amendments to Senate bill
291. First, the amendment changes the responsibility for promulgating rules to the NM
Department of Agriculture from the Soil and Water Conservation Commission but requires the
latter’s advice and consent. Second, the amendment defines “taxpayer" to include partnerships,
limited liability corporations, or other pass-through entities and prorates the credit to share of
ownership. Both of these provisions apply to the personal income tax and corporate income tax.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 291 allows a taxpayer to claim a credit against personal or corporate income tax
liability of up to 75 percent of incurred expenses up to $10,000 for eligible improvements that
conserve water used in agriculture. The taxpayer must own or lease the water right for the land,
file an NM tax return, not be a dependent of another taxpayer and does not take the credit for
both personal and corporate income tax.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 291/aSCORC – Page
2
An eligible improvement is one made after January 1, 2008, is consistent with a water
conservation plan approved by the local soil and water conservation district, and designed to
conserve water on farm, ranch or timber land. Co-owners of the land can receive pro-rata shares
of the credit and the credit can be carried forward for five years if it exceeds the liability in the
current year.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The amendments by SCORC do not change the fiscal impact estimated in the original bill.
TRD:
Note: Fiscal impacts of the bill have been revised due to new information, not primarily
because of the amendments.
According to the USDA’s Census of Agriculture, 2003 Farm and Ranch Irrigation
Survey 2,500 New Mexico farms spent a total of $25.6 million on all types of investment
in irrigation equipment, land improvement and computer technology in that year. For the
U.S. as a whole, that figure had declined slightly over the previous five years. $6.2
million of the total was spent on water conservation investments. The estimate assumes
that a substantial part of the remaining investment would qualify for the proposed credit,
so that the total credit base of expenditures would be about $14 million in tax year 2008.
Assuming the $14 million is spread over the 2,500 farms that had investments of any kind
yields an average per farm of about $5,500. At a credit rate of 75 percent, this would
yield potential credits of $4,125 per farm. Based on farm income information from the
Census of Agriculture and income statistics from the federal income tax returns of New
Mexico residents, it appears that the average farm operator will have between $1,000 and
$2,000 of annual income tax liability. Thus, the average farm would not be able to take
advantage of the full $4,1215 in credits in one year. The fiscal impact assumes that
taxpayers will use 60 percent of the credits in the year in which they are generated, and
the remainder are carried forward and used over the next four years. Credits earned in
tax year 2008 are assumed to be claimed for the first time in the spring of 2009 when the
tax returns for tax year 2008 are due. The same pattern is assumed in future years.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Farm income tax liability is generally low due to the nature of the industry and the tax treatment
of agriculture both at the state level and the federal level. The average farm had a net income of
$19, 373 in 2002, according to the Department of Agriculture. Credits for expenditures such as
irrigation equipment will have the effect of completely erasing tax liability in many cases.
NF/mt