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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
2-19-07
HB
SHORT TITLE TAX POLICY STUDY
SB 1109
ANALYST Aubel
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
$500.0
Non-Rec
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources (EMNRD)
No Response
New Mexico Environment Department (NMED)
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 1109 appropriates $500.0 thousand from the general fund to the Office of the
Governor to conduct a study on the economic, environmental, and fiscal impacts of shifting New
Mexico taxation from a system of taxing desirable activities -- such as income, work, property
and purchasing products & services -- to a progressive system of taxing undesirable activities,
such as waste, pollution and the use of non-renewable resources.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
SB 1109 appropriates $500.0 thousand to the Governor's office for use in FY08. Any
unexpended or unencumbered balance of this nonrecurring appropriation would revert at the end
of FY08.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 1109 – Page
2
DFA suggests that simply building an economic model with the proper policy “hooks and levers"
may by itself take at least a year, and that a final report may take longer, although how much
longer is not specified. Thus, additional appropriations may be required to complete the study.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
According to DFA, using tax policy is one of the five themes stemming from the Governor’s
community task force on how New Mexicans want their communities and their state to grow and
thrive. SB 1109 proposes studying how New Mexico might transition from a tax system that
taxes desirable activities to one that taxes undesirable activities over the next 20 years, including
the economic, environmental, and fiscal impacts.
The community task force recommends that the study address the following potential impacts of
the new tax system:
Actual results where this system in being used in other places around the world;
Effects on creating new jobs, changing patterns of consumption, increasing the use of
renewable energy, and improving the state’s economy;
Impact on innovation and entrepreneurship in New Mexico;
Impact on growth and creation of locally-owned businesses;
Impact on job creation and average household income;
Impact on major business categories in New Mexico agriculture, finance and real estate,
health care, manufacturing, mining, etc;
Impact on New Mexico’s rank in U.S. economic performance;
Impact on air, soil, water, and water quality;
Impact on living systems;
Impact on health and quality of life of New Mexicans; and
Impact on community use of sustainable and affordable energy supplies.
It has long been noted that taxes are arguably one of the strongest means a governing agency has
to motivate behavior, serving as powerful economic incentives and disincentives. The primary
questions the study would address include:
Is New Mexico taxing behaviors it wants to discourage, and rewarding those it wants to
encourage.
Is New Mexico’s tax system—albeit in the well-intentioned service of our citizens—actually
creating powerful reverse incentives.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation could add performance measures and timelines for study parameters to ensure
the efficient use of resources and establish clear production commitments. An example would be
a report to the Legislative Finance Committee on a periodic basis for review.
pg_0003
Senate Bill 1109 – Page
3
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Background
According to DFA, the state’s tax system has been extensively studied about once a decade for
50 years. There was the Citizen’s Tax Study Committee in 1984, a legislative tax study task
force (“known as ‘Manny’s committee’) around 1991, the Professional Tax Study Committee
(PTSC) in the mid-1990s and the Blue Ribbon Tax Study Commission in 2004. Fewer than 10
percent of the recommendations of any of these tax study groups have found their way into New
Mexico’s law. Prior to the PTSC effort in the mid-1990s, Tax and Revenue Department prepared
a document discussing the various tax studies know to have occurred going back to the New
Mexico Taxpayers Association days. This document ends with “Manny’s committee", but lists
no fewer than 11 studies of the state’s tax system. Only in 1968 were the bulk of the
recommendations accepted. This effort produced the Tax Administration Act, the Gross Receipts
and Compensating Tax Act, and eight other bills that are now law. DFA notes that paying
adequately for outside expert analysis and advice has only been tried once before, with
indifferent results.
Taxation Study
DFA suggests that using the Governor’s community task force as a basis for the study may
provide additional impetus and focus to generate significant results.
The Governor’s task force believes it possible that a revised tax system could:
1.
Increase job creation;
2.
Reduce poverty;
3.
Increase capital investment in business;
4.
Jumpstart innovation;
5.
Clean up our air, soil and water and reduce global warming gases;
6.
Avoid passing costs on to future generations;
7.
Encourage prudent, efficient economic behavior, while strongly discouraging wasteful
behavior; and
8.
Make New Mexico more competitive nationally and internationally
Currently New Mexico, its municipalities and counties tax work, income, property ownership,
and purchase of products and services. Paradoxically, these are positive activities that are
burdened with taxes. EMNRD proposes that the study would provide valuable information on
the effects of shifting the tax burden to polluting and non-renewable energy industries. It would
also provide data to show how non-renewable energy industries could be de-incentivized, which
may foster renewable-resource-industry development.
Some economists believe that reducing or eliminating payroll and income taxes, and replacing
them with taxes on waste, pollution, and resource depletion, would foster innovation, create far
more and better paying jobs, fight poverty, and increase overall prosperity and quality of life,
while reducing pollution and global warming.
pg_0004
Senate Bill 1109 – Page
4
The study would determine whether the proposed shift in taxes would create a future of higher
employment, higher personal incomes, more jobs from innovation and invention; cleaner air,
soil, and water; and healthier citizens.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
A tax policy study as a first step toward looking at ways to improve the economic and quality of
life in New Mexico through shifting the tax burden would not be taken.
MA/nt