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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Salazar
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/04/07
3/07/07 HB 430/aHBIC/aHTRC
SHORT TITLE Advanced Energy Product Tax Credit
SB
ANALYST Francis
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
(750.0)
(900.0) Recurring General Fund
(112.5)
(135.0) Recurring
Local
Government
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
Responses Received From
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
Energy Minerals and Natural Resources Department (EMNRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HTRC Amendment
The House Taxation and Revenue Committee amended House Bill 430 to clarify the definition
of eligible equipment. The value is defined as the adjusted basis used for federal income tax
purposes as of the time of acquisition or introduction into the state or the time of conversion to
use.
Synopsis of HBIC Amendment
The House Business and Industry Committee amended House Bill 430 to change the date for
qualified to expenditures to July 1, 2007. The original eligibility date was July 1, 2006.
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 430 provides a credit against combined reporting taxes (gross receipts, compensating
and withholding) for manufacturing advanced energy products. Advanced energy products are
pg_0002
House Bill 430/aHBIC/aHTRC – Page
2
defined:
Advanced energy vehicle
Fuel cell system
Renewable energy system or component of an advanced energy vehicle
Fuel cell system or renewable energy system or components for integrated gasification
combined cycle coal facilities
Equipment related to sequestration of carbon from integrated gasification combined cycle
plants
The credit is for qualified expenditures after July 1, 2006, and cannot exceed five percent of the
taxpayer’s qualified expenditures. To be eligible, the taxpayer must show that they have hired an
additional full time employee from the previous year for each $500 thousand of qualified
expenditures up to $30 million and an additional full time job for each $1 million of qualified
expenditures above $30 million. The jobs are net new jobs not just new jobs. For a taxpayer that
has $10 million in qualified expenditures, it would need to show that they have hired 20 full-time
employees over last year ($10,000,000 ÷ $500,000 = 20) to qualify for the $500 thousand credit;
if the taxpayer has $40 million in qualified expenditures, it would need to show at least 70 full-
time employees (60 for the first $30 million and 10 for the balance) to receive a $2 million
credit.
Table 1: Examples of Required Jobs
Qualified
Expenditures
Number of
Jobs Required
Calculation
$1,000,000
2
$1,000,000 / 500,000
$10,000,000
20
10,000,000 / 500,000
$40,000,000
70
(40,000,000 – 30,000,000) / 1,000,000 + 30,000,000 / 500,000
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Revisions shown here reflect most current TRD analysis.
TRD:
Based on information provided by industry representatives, eligible investment is
expected to be about $70 million in FY 2008 and about $190 million in FY 2009 with the
annual amount falling thereafter. Thus, potential credit claims under the proposal would
be $3.5 million in FY 2008 and $9.5 million in FY 2009. Because these credits are non-
refundable, actual credit claims will be limited to the amount of tax liability less the
amount of other tax credits. Amounts in excess of tax liability may be carried forward
for up to five years. If the affected taxpayers qualify for industrial revenue bond
financing, they will not owe GRT or compensating tax on the equipment they install.
Thus, their liability will consist mainly of any GRT on their product sales and
withholding tax on their payroll. If their products are exported, their GRT liability will
be further limited. Thus, the main base for the tax credit claims will be withholding tax.
If the investments are $100 million, the impact is $5 million. This could be the case if a
company as large as Advent Solar or the proposed concentrating solar power plant applied for
the credit.
pg_0003
House Bill 430/aHBIC/aHTRC – Page
3
The credit will primarily impact the general fund, but the local government will experience a
small impact. Claims against the gross receipts and compensating taxes will impact the general
fund and local governments. Overall, general fund revenue will be reduced by about $750
thousand and local government revenue will be reduced by about $112.5 thousand based on the
share of combined taxes (CRS taxes) that are gross receipts.
An investment of $10 million means 20 full time jobs.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Manufacturing jobs typically pay more than average wages. According to the NM Department of
Labor, two occupations likely to be employed by companies receiving the credit have starting
wages well above minimum. Manufacturing wages were $14.24 per hour or almost $30
thousand in December 2006. Specialized or highly skilled manufacturing boasts even higher
wages.
One beneficiary of the credit is likely to be Advent Solar, a photovoltaic solar cell manufacturer
located within the Mesa del Sol tax increment for development district. The credit will take
away from the development’s projected gross receipts tax revenues.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
TRD:
The new Credit will impose a set of record-keeping requirements on the Department. These
functions have to be performed manually because at the present time the Department does
not have an automated system for processing tax credits. With the proliferation of new tax
credits in recent years, each of which has different eligibility criteria and record-keeping
requirements, the Department has had to allocate more staff time to manually processing
credits. A more efficient method, that would yield more accurate financial results, would be
for the Legislature to streamline the credit provisions in tax law – i.e. impose the same
criteria for eligibility and applicability of the credits -- and appropriate funds to the
Department to develop an automated system for processing credits.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The definition of “advanced energy product" is confusing regarding renewable energy system.
The definition seems to suggest that the renewable energy system is for an advanced energy
vehicle or for integrated gasification combined cycle coal facilities and not a stand alone
renewable energy system. The definition of renewable energy system suggests a stand alone
power generator.
TRD:
The bill does not define the value of the qualified equipment. That can be a problem because
you can have delivery costs, installation costs, and construction costs associated with self-
constructed equipment, and value of used equipment brought into the state or used equipment
that was previously granted the credit. An existing definition that could be adopted for this
purpose is the definition of value in the Compensating Tax: “the adjusted basis of the
property for federal income tax purposes determined as of the time of acquisition or
introduction into this state or of conversion to use, whichever is later."
pg_0004
House Bill 430/aHBIC/aHTRC – Page
4
TRD also reports problems with the methodology in determining increased employment. HB430
establishes a fixed point in time as the baseline to determine new jobs. An employer could time
its purchase based on a day when employment was lower than usual, due to any number of
reasons, the year before on that day.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
TRD:
Investment credits and the Gross Receipts Tax on Manufacturing Equipment:
Unlike most states, New Mexico does not provide an exemption from its broad-based sales
and use tax – the Gross Receipts and Compensating Tax (“GRT and Comp. Tax") – for sales
of equipment to manufacturers. Since these equipment costs can be a very large expense in
the early period of operations, a number of manufacturers have argued that this policy makes
New Mexico a less desirable location in which to invest. The proposal is an attempt to
reduce this taxation by the mechanism of a tax credit for a particular industry. Although this
approach is generally consistent with making New Mexico’s tax treatment more consistent
with that of other states, it does not provide the same treatment to all industries. In addition,
since manufacturing operations are often able to secure Industrial Revenue Bond (“IRB")
financing from local governments, their equipment purchases will already be exempted from
the GRT or Comp. Tax through the IRB mechanism. In this case, the proposed credit
becomes a way for the manufacturer to reduce the GRT, Comp. Tax or Withholding they
owe on other transactions, not a credit against the GRT or Comp. Tax on their equipment
purchases.
The proposal includes in the definition of “advanced energy products" components related to
integrated gasification combined cycle coal facilities. The proposed credit is not available to
a power plant that uses such equipment, however, because the credit is available only for
equipment used to manufacture advanced energy products. If the credit were modified to
include purchases of combined cycle equipment for producing electricity, the fiscal impacts
would be much larger.
ALTERNATIVES
To address TRD concerns, the calculation of the value of qualifying expenditures could match
the calculation in the gross receipts and compensating tax.
The method of calculating net new employment could be changed to use an average of the year
or quarter prior to the eligible expenditure and the average employment of the year or quarter in
which the expenditure happened.
To address possible financing problems within tax increment development districts, eligible
expenditures within these districts could be excluded.
QUESTIONS
How will this incentive and any GRT-based incentive affect tax increment for development
districts.
NF/csd