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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
2/14/07
3/09/07 HB
SHORT TITLE Employer-Sponsored Insurance Tax Credits
SB 869/aSCORC
ANALYST Francis
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
($550.0)
Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Conflicts with S723
Relates to SB871
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SCORC Amendment
The Senate Corporations and Transportation Committee amended Senate Bill 869 allowing the
credit only to those employers who have not provided insurance in the past 12 months, removes
the additional 5 percent credit and sunsets the credit effective January 1, 2010.
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 869 provides an income tax credit to NM employers with fewer than ten employees
for up to five percent of employer-sponsored health insurance. The credit can be claimed against
either personal income tax liability or corporate income tax liability. If the employer has not
provided health insurance in the past twelve months, the employer is entitled to an additional 5
percent credit. The credit is refundable which means that if the credit exceeds tax liability the
excess is returned to the taxpayer.
The effective date is January 1, 2007.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 869/aSCORC – Page
2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The fiscal impact was revised due to an inaccurate estimate of the number of new
employees that would be covered.
There are 29,000 employers with fewer than ten employees. Total employment for these
employers is 97,000. The Health Policy Commission estimates, based on survey data of
employers, that 46 percent of those employers who employ between 1 and 5 employees and 63%
of those employers between 5 and 10 employees currently provide health insurance. Assuming
the credit entices enough employers to show a 2 percent growth rate in coverage and an average
health insurance premium of $5,100 (weighted by family size), the five percent credit would
reduce income tax collections by $550 thousand in FY08. An estimated 2,000 employees would
be newly covered by insurance. As noted below, the number of employers providing health
insurance is declining and so a 2 percent increase in covered employees is a reasonable
assumption.
Table 1: Fiscal Impact
# Employees
5% Credit
New Employees
2,000
550,000
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Nationally, health insurance premiums grew tremendously over the last decade and though the
rate of growth has slowed in the last two years, it remains near 10 percent. That compares with
inflation at approximately 3 percent and the economy which is also growing at about 3 percent.
As the premiums increase, the number of employers offering health insurance decreases.
According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, which tracks a host of health related issues, the
percentage of employers offering health insurance has dropped from 69 percent to 60 percent in
the last few years.
In NM, affordable health insurance is more of a problem than nationally. The burden of
providing health care access has shifted from the employer to the government, particularly for
children whose parents cannot get health insurance at work. States have recently been trying to
reverse that and one way is to offer tax incentives that encourage employers to provide access to
health insurance. However, the cost of health insurance is still an insurmountable obstacle for
many smaller businesses and if they provide it they have to pass on a significant share of the
premium to the employee.
The importance of health care coverage in New Mexico cannot be understated. Other than
Texas, no other state has a higher percentage of uninsured than New Mexico. The chart below
shows the state rankings.
pg_0003
Senate Bill 869/aSCORC – Page
3
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Senate Bill 723 offers a similar credit but the credit is between 35 and 50 percent and the firm
size threshold is 50 employees. Senate Bill 871 provides a credit for the purchase of health
insurance by an individual.
NF/mt