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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Lujan, B.
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/30/08
HM 37
SHORT TITLE Study Manufacturing Incentives
SB
ANALYST Earnest
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
NFI
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Memorial 37 requests that the Economic Development Department and the Taxation and
Revenue Department examine the effectiveness of current tax incentives and other incentives to
attract and retain manufacturing operation to the state. The memorial also requests that these
departments report the results of their examination and their recommendations for any new
legislation to the legislative finance committee and the interim revenue stabilization and tax
policy committee no later than November 1, 2008.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
No significant fiscal impact. There may be some administrative impact on TRD and EDD to
carry out the examination.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
According to the final report of the Tax Incentive and Accountability Task Force, released by
EDD in April 2006, among the most frequently used and costly incentives are the manufacturing
investment tax credit, high wage job tax credit, rural jobs tax credit, technology jobs tax credit,
and research and development small business tax credit. The report laid out a plan for
evaluating tax incentives biannually.
LFC proposed legislation in the 2007 session to address tax expenditures and tax incentive
accountability. The bill on tax incentive accountability, House Bill 697, failed to pass and the bill
pg_0002
House Memorial 37 – Page
2
on tax expenditures, House Bill 235, was vetoed through the governor’s inaction. In the 2007
interim, LFC joined with the Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD) and the Economic
Development Department to educate members and the public on the importance of monitoring
the tax structure. The main thrust of the presentations was the need for accountability and
adherence to sound tax principles:
Adequacy: Revenue should be adequate to fund government services.
Efficiency: Tax base should be as broad as possible to minimize rates on any group.
Equity: Tax should be fairly applied across similarly situated taxpayers and incomes.
Administrability: Tax collection should be simple and easily understood by taxpayers to
maximize compliance.
Accountability: Deductions, credits, and exemptions should be easy to monitor and evaluate.
Each new tax proposal should be evaluated on these principles to determine how the proposal fits
into the existing tax structure. The appendix includes a sample of “tax expenditures," or
deviations from established tax policy, and TRD has begun a multi-year study of tax
expenditures beginning with a review of existing business tax credits. One major step was the
creation of a tax form for corporate income tax credits similar to the one for personal income tax.
BE/bb