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SPONSOR: |
Snyder |
DATE TYPED: |
|
HB |
|
||
SHORT TITLE: |
Employee Health Insurance Premium Tax Credit |
SB |
335/aSCORC |
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Neel |
|||||
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue |
Subsequent Years Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
|
FY03 |
FY04 |
|
|
|
|
($0.1) See
Narrative |
($0.1) See
Narrative |
Recurring |
General
Fund |
|
|
|
|
|
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
LFC files
Responses Received From:
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
No Responses Received From:
Public Regulatory Commission (PRC)
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of SCORC Amendment
The Senate Corporations and Transportation
Committee’s amendment limits the tax credits included in SB 335 to companies of
35 or fewer employees.
Synopsis
of Original Bill
Senate Bill 335 amends statute to add sections
to the income tax act allowing for both corporate and personal tax credits
equal to 25 percent of the value for health insurance premiums paid by the
taxpayer. SB 335 allows married couples
filing separately to claim 50 percent of the credit and allows those included
in partnerships to claim the tax credit equal to the percent equity in the
business.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
TRD’s original fiscal impact was $100 million in
FY04 and subsequent years. The impact
will be significantly reduced based on the SCORC amendment.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Healthcare Trends. The healthcare trends in
A recent Deloitte & Touche L.L.P. (
•
Promoting medical
savings accounts;
•
Changing plan
designs;
•
Stressing
preventive care;
•
Disease
management programs;
•
Helping employees
adopt healthier life styles (smoking cessation, weight control);
•
Identifying New
Mexico-specific health conditions (diabetes, cardiovascular disease, obesity,
substance abuse, etc.) and targeting resources to prevention programs;
•
Restructuring
employer and employee contribution schedules;
•
Rethinking
statutory provisions (regulations, taxes); and
•
Curbing unfunded
mandates.
In the early 1990s, escalating healthcare costs
were temporarily slowed by restrictions imposed by health maintenance
organizations. Solving the cost problem
might be harder today:
·
Doctors and
hospitals are successfully challenging managed care controls that (1) slow hospital
admissions (2) reduce contractual payments to medical providers, and (3)
require patients to ask insurers for approval before certain expensive tests or
procedures. Increased payments to
doctors and hospitals result in higher costs and premiums.
·
State and federal
lawmakers forced insurers to relax some of their most restrictive cost controls
(i.e., requiring patients to call ahead before going to emergency rooms, and
sending women home within 24 hours of giving birth). Insurers voluntarily relaxed other rules,
particularly those regarding specialist visits.
·
Patients have an
“entitlement mentality” after a decade of $10 office visits and lower
out-of-pocket costs.
·
New prescription
drugs and technologies entering the market contribute to increased costs. Spending on prescription drugs is increasing
three times faster than the rate of inflation.
The population is 10 years older.
Hospital admissions are increasing after years of stability.
SN/yr:njw