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SPONSOR: |
Larranaga |
DATE
TYPED: |
|
HB |
163 |
||
SHORT
TITLE: |
Physicians
Gross Receipts Deduction |
SB |
|
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Smith |
|||||
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue |
Subsequent Years Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
|
FY03 |
FY04 |
|
|
|
|
(20,700.0) |
(22,600.0) |
Recurring |
General Fund |
|
(18,100.0) |
(19,700.0) |
Recurring |
Local Governments |
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Responses
Received From
TRD
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 163 adds a
new section of statute to provide a gross receipts tax deduction for receipts
of physicians licensed pursuant to the Medical Practice Act (Chapter 61,
Article 6 NMSA 1978). The proposal also
amends Section 7-9-77.1 NMSA 1978 to delete language allowing the deduction for
Medicare receipts of medical doctors and osteopaths.
FISCAL
IMPLICATIONS
TRD reports that the fiscal
impact was derived using the 1997 Census of Healthcare Services in New Mexico,
the Department’s “Analysis of Gross Receipts by Standard Industrial Classification”
(Report-80), “Combined Reporting System-Warrant Distribution Summary” (Report
490B) and state Medicare and Medicaid expenditure data from the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMMS).
CONFLICT,
DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
SB-35 and SB-63 provide
deductions for certain receipts of health practitioners paid by managed care
providers; SB-158 provides a deduction for food and health practitioner
services.
TECHNICAL
ISSUES
TRD notes an unintended
consequence. The bill specifies the
deduction shall apply to physicians licensed pursuant to the Medical Practice
Act. Osteopathic physicians are not
licensed pursuant to the provisions of the Medical Practice Act; Section
61-6-17 (Exceptions to the Act) specifically excludes them from those
provisions. Osteopathic physicians are
licensed pursuant to Chapter 61, Article 10 NMSA 1978 (Osteopathic Medicine and
Surgery). The proposal also deletes the
reference to osteopaths in Section 7-9-77.1, which currently provides the
Medicare deduction. The combined effect
of the two provisions is that osteopathic physicians would be ineligible for
the proposed deduction, and would also lose their current deduction allowed for
Medicare receipts.
According to the
Osteopathic Medical Association, osteopathic physicians represent 6% of the
SS/yr