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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Smith
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/27/06
HB
SHORT TITLE Low and Middle Income Taxpayer Tax Exemption SB 313
ANALYST Francis
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY06
FY07
FY08
(1,200.0)
(2,400.0)
(2,400.0) Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates HB 385
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
Responses Received From
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 313 amends the Income Tax Act to expand the income brackets for the exemption for
low- and middle-income taxpayers. The effective date is for tax years beginning January 1, 2006
forward.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
SB 313 would give average tax relief of $44 per return for 55 thousand returns. This will lower
personal income tax collections $1.2 million in FY06 and $2.4 million in FY07 and subsequent
years. The personal income tax revenues are distributed entirely to the general fund.
The low- and middle-income tax exemption was passed into law during the 2005 regular session
and rather than a smooth phase-out, the bill contained caps on the adjustable gross income. This
meant that many taxpayers missed out on the exemption. SB 313 corrects this anomaly. By re-
moving the caps and allowing for a phase-out, the exemption slowly fades with increased income
rather than falling dramatically once a taxpayer reaches a certain income.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 313 – Page
2
TECHNICAL ISSUES
TRD recommends adding language that would make it clear to the tax filer that the exemption
phases out to zero and is never a negative exemption (which would theoretically result in a tax
liability).
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
TRD has provided an illustration of the impacts and the phase-out:
Illustration: Current and Proposed Low-and Middle-Income Personal Income Tax Exemp-
tions
House Taxation and Revenue Committee Substitute for House Bills 410, 582, 844 and 1086, en-
acted in 2005, created a new personal income tax exemption for low- and middle-income tax-
payers. The exemption is $2,500 multiplied by the number of exemptions claimed for federal in-
come tax purposes for taxpayers in certain income ranges. Beyond a threshold level of adjusted
gross income (AGI), the exemption declines by a percentage of the increase in AGI over the
threshold. The percentage rate of decline depends on filing status, as shown in column 3 of Ta-
ble 1 below. Present law provides that the exemption is eliminated completely for taxpayer’s
with income above a cap which depends on their filing status, as indicated in column four of the
summary table. Taxpayers previously filing head of household returns will file joint returns as a
result of the new legislation and receive the same exemption levels as joint return filers. Under
the proposal, these caps would be eliminated. Under the phase out schedule for the exemptions
already in present law, exemptions would thus be available for taxpayers with AGI up to the
amounts shown in column six of the table.
Table 1: Summary -- Current and Proposed Law Exemption Variables
Filing Status
AGI
Threshold
Decline
Rate (%)
AGI Above Which
Exemption is Zero
Exemption For
Immediately
Preceding AGI*
Proposed AGI
Above which Ex-
emption is Zero*
Married Joint
$24,000
10
$40,667
$850
$49,000
Single
$16,000
15
$27,110
$925
$32,667
Married Separate $12,000
20
$20,333
$900
$24,500
*Assumes one exemption for federal tax purposes. **AGI above which exemption is zero.
Adjusted Gross Income ($)
2,500
32,667
925
New Personal Income Tax Exemption – Single Filers
Proposed Extension
0
Exemption Amount ($)
27,110
16,000
pg_0003
Senate Bill 313 – Page
3
As illustrated above, current statutes generate rather awkward conditions wherein the exemptions
drop to zero abruptly above the AGI cap.
1
Hence, for example, a single taxpayer claiming one
exemption for federal purposes whose adjusted income totals $27,110 would be eligible for the
new exemption totaling $925. The new exemption would vanish if the taxpayer's AGI increased
by $1 to $27,111 however. Tax savings from the $925 exemption would depend on the tax-
payer's taxable income, but probably be in the range of $25. By eliminating the AGI caps in pre-
sent law, the proposal extends the exemptions along the decline rates in present law as shown by
the dashed line in the graphic above. Thus, single taxpayers could qualify for exemptions until
their adjusted gross incomes exceeded $32,667.
Table 2: Proposed New Exemption Extension Data by Filing Status
Head of
Joint Single Household Separate All Returns
Non- Schedule B Filers
Total Tax Savings
$1,409,326 $514,895 $363,806 $14,800 $2,302,826
Number of Returns
23,388 20,117 5,926 548 49,979
Reported Exemptions
73,307 20,780 14,067 752 108,906
Average Savings Per Return ($) $60 $26 $61 $27 $46
Average Savings Per Exemption ($) $19 $25 $26 $20 $21
Schedule B Filers*
Total Tax Savings
$79,179 $31,026 $11,226 $2,843 $124,275
Number of Returns
2,725 1,739 341 52 4,857
Reported Exemptions
8,169 1,767 853 64 10,853
Average Savings Per Return
$29 $18 $33 $55 $26
Average Savings Per Exemption $10 $1 $1 $44 $3
All Filers
Total Tax Savings
$1,488,505 $545,921 $375,032 $17,643 $2,427,101
Number of Returns
26,113 21,856 6,267 600 54,836
Reported Exemptions
81,476 41,560 28,134 816 119,759
Average Savings Per Return
$57 $25 $60 $29 $44
Average Savings Per Exemption $18 $13 $13 $22 $16
Information source: compiled and calculated from 2003 New Mexico personal income tax return data. * Schedule B filers receive income from
outside and within New Mexico. They are therefore required to calculate tax obligations as if all income is earned in New Mexico and pay tax
based on the percentage of income earned in New Mexico. Estimates shown above assume Schedule B filers in receive the exemptions propor-
tion to the ratio of their New Mexico to total income. Schedule B filers tend to benefit less than other taxpayers from the new exemptions because
their incomes tend to be higher than Non-Schedule B filers.
Personal income tax return information summarized in Table 2 indicates the fiscal impacts of the
proposal would total approximately $2.4 million annually if they had been in place during the
2003 tax year. The exemptions could have been claimed on approximately 55,000 returns with
total exemptions reported of 120 thousand. Tax savings of $44 per return and $16 per exemption
would be available under the proposal. Actual impacts of the proposed extension could differ
from amounts shown in Table 2, for a number of reasons. Population increases, as well as
changes in the average number of federal exemptions, taxable and adjusted gross income will
affect the exemption amounts claimed. However, based on projections of population and income
1
The condition was caused by an apparent inconsistency between legislative intent and the manner in which the
legislation was drafted.
pg_0004
Senate Bill 313 – Page
4
growth, it appears that the total amount claimed each year will be relatively stable around the
$2.4 million figure. Total fiscal impacts are stable because income growth results in some new
taxpayers becoming eligible for the extended exemption while others lose eligibility because
their income grows to the point that it exceeds the implicit income caps in the phase-out formula.
NF/yr