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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Sanchez, B
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/28/08
2/08/08 HB
SHORT TITLE High-Wage Jobs Tax Credit Eligibility
SB 174/aSFC
ANALYST Schardin
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
FY10
(See Narrative for
FY11 Impact)
Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Conflicts with HB326.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Economic Development Department (EDD)
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SFC Amendment
The Senate Finance Committee amendment to Senate Bill 174 removes language that would
have created a sliding scale with reduced credit offered for jobs with lower wages in larger
municipalities.
Rather than eliminating the deadline for creation of a job to qualify for the credit, the amended
bill would push the deadline back from the current deadline of July 1, 2009 until July 1, 2015.
Finally, the amendment creates a requirement that EDD report each year by November 1 to the
appropriate legislative interim committee on the cost of the high wage jobs tax credit and its
impact on company recruitment and job creation.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 174 amends the high wage jobs tax credit to allow a sliding scale with a reduced
credit offered to jobs with lower wages in municipalities with populations of 40 thousand or
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Senate Bill 174/aSFC – Page
2
more. Under current law, a 10 percent credit on wages and benefits is available in municipalities
with populations of 40 thousand or more for jobs with wages of $40 thousand or more. The bill
proposes allowing a 2.5 percent credit for wages and benefits in these municipalities for jobs
paying from $28 to $32 thousand, a 5 percent credit for jobs paying from $32 to $36 thousand, a
7.5 percent credit for jobs paying from $36 to $40 thousand, and the same 10 percent credit for
jobs paying $40 thousand or more.
The bill does not affect the size of the credit in municipalities with populations under 40
thousand or in unincorporated areas, where a 10 percent credit would still be available for wages
and benefits for jobs with wages of at least $28 thousand.
The bill also extends the time frame during which a job must be created for a company to qualify
for the credit. Under current law, the job must be created by July 1, 2009 to qualify for the credit
for the next three years. The bill will allow the credit for a job created at any time in the future.
The proposal would also explicitly require that a job must provide benefits to qualify for the
credit.
Because the bill has no effective date, it will become effective 90 days after adjournment of the
2008 legislative session, on May 14, 2008.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
TRD’s fiscal analysis of the amended bill is based on historic claims for the credit. The bill
would reduce general fund revenue starting in FY11 by eliminating the July 1, 2009 deadline for
jobs to be created. The revenue reduction is expected to be $108 thousand in FY11 and $221
thousand in FY12.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Data from TRD indicate that the high wage jobs tax credit resulted in a loss of revenue equal to
$575.0 thousand in FY06, $1,685.5 thousand in FY07, and $977.5 thousand in the first four
months of FY08.
The high-wage jobs tax credit may currently be claimed by an eligible employer who creates a
new economic-based job that is filled for at least 48 weeks of the prior year. The credit may be
claimed against the state gross receipts tax, the compensating tax, withholding taxes, and several
smaller surcharges. To be eligible for the credit, more than half of an employer’s sales in the
previous year must have been made to persons outside of New Mexico. The credit is refundable
and may be claimed for up to four years for each job created.
In 2007, the enactment of House Bill 839, the omnibus economic development tax bill, deleted
the January 1, 2010 repeal date of the high wage jobs tax credit. But although that legislation
made the credit permanent, the credit currently applies only to jobs created before July 1, 2009.
From a tax policy standpoint, allowing the credit to be claimed for four years only for jobs
created before July 1, 2009 leads to an uneven playing field for companies that operate in New
Mexico before and after that date.
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Senate Bill 174/aSFC – Page
3
TRD is concerned that both proposed and current law give companies an incentive to locate just
outside the boundaries of municipalities with populations over 40 thousand. Under current law, a
10 percent credit can be claimed in an unincorporated area for wages over $28 thousand, while
wages of $40 thousand would need to be paid to receive the credit in a nearby municipality.
TRD notes that the ability of this credit to stimulate economic development depends on a number
of factors including the elasticity of demand for labor and final products (how responsive
demand is to a change in cost). TRD recommends studying such complicated issues on an
ongoing basis to determine the efficacy of the credit.
LFC notes that while individual credits, deductions and exemptions may have small fiscal
impacts, their cumulative effect significantly narrows the gross receipts tax base. Narrowing the
gross receipts tax base increases revenue volatility and requires a higher tax rate to generate the
same amount of revenue.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
EDD asserts that allowing companies to have easier access to the high wage jobs tax credit is
critical to major recruitment projects.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The administrative impact on TRD will be minimal.
CONFLICT
Senate Bill 174 as amended conflicts with House Bill 326. That bill also extends the deadline by
which a job must be created to qualify for the high-wage jobs tax credit from July 1, 2009 to July
1, 2015. However, House Bill 326 does not require EDD to report annually to the legislature on
the cost and impact of the high wage jobs tax credit.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
If the intent of the amendments made on Page 7, lines 17-20 is to require benefits to be provided
for a job to qualify for the credit, the bill should also change the application provisions for the
credit to include proof of benefits provided to the employee.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
EDD reports that current recruitment efforts could be jeopardized if the deadline to create jobs is
not removed or extended.
SS/mt:bb