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SPONSOR: |
Russell |
DATE TYPED: |
1-27-02 |
HB |
223 |
||
SHORT TITLE: |
Annuity & Pension Income Tax Exemption |
SB |
|
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Neel |
|||||
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue |
Subsequent Years
Impact |
Recurring or Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
|
FY02 |
FY03 |
|
|
|
|
$ (18,540.0) |
$ (20,600.0) |
Recurring |
General Fund |
|
|
|
|
|
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
LFC files
No response received from the Taxation and
Revenue Department (TRD).
SUMMARY
This personal income tax bill
authorizes an exemption of up to $3,000 for annuity and pension income. Pension
and annuity income is defined as:
The
exemption is authorized beginning tax year 2002
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Based on TRD’s analysis for the
exact piece of legislation in 2001, HB 223 would reduce general fund revenue on
a recurring basis by $18,000.0 and $20,000.0 in FY02 and FY03,
respectively. In order to update the
analysis a growth rate of three percent has been applied to derive an updated impact
to state revenues. TRD’s original
estimate relies on: taxable IRA distributions, pensions and annuities and
self-employment retirement plans as reported for New Mexico by the Internal Revenue
Service Statistics of Income. Social security benefits are not included under
the provisions of this bill. Another key input in this analysis is the number
of tax returns reporting pension and IRA income.
According to the 2001
TRD analysis, each pension recipient with taxable income would realize state
tax savings of $50 to $246, with a probable average savings of about $100 to
$135 in annual state income taxes. The average benefit at the median adjusted
gross income level for pensioners would be about $100 per return. A significant
portion, possibly 70 percent, results from tax decreases for taxpayers under
age 65. Recall that state income taxes are deductible for federal tax purposes.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
TRD notes they will be unable to
differentiate between particular types of 1099-R income during tax return
processing, and unable to determine the taxable portions of 1099-R income
included in federal adjusted gross income in some cases. Therefore, portions of
income already exempt from tax could be deducted a second time, and additional
income, not intended to be exempt, may possibly be excluded from state income
taxation. Verification would be manual.
SN/njw
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