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committees of the NM Legislature. The LFC does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of these reports
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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Barela
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/20/07
2/22/07 HB 833/aHBIC
SHORT TITLE Low-Income Housing Material Gross Receipts
SB
ANALYST Schardin
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
($396.0)
Recurring General Fund
($264.0)
Recurring
Local
Governments
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HBIC Amendment
The House Business and Industry Committee amendment to House Bill 833 addresses a
technical issue raised by TRD. The amendment requires the buyer to deliver a nontaxable
transaction certificate to the seller for receipts to receive the deduction. The amendment also
restricts the deduction to receipts for materials purchase by a non-profit entity that is directly
related to its tax-exempt purpose.
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 833 expands a gross receipts and governmental gross receipts deduction granted in
Section 7-9-60 NMSA 1978 to allow receipts from selling construction material or metalliferous
mineral ore to a 501(c) (3) organization organized to provide homeownership opportunities to
low-income families to be deducted.
The effective date of these provisions is July 1, 2007.
pg_0002
House Bill 833/aHBIC – Page
2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Based on information from federal tax returns filed by New Mexico non-profit entities TRD
estimates that 20 to 30 non-profit entities operate in New Mexico each year to provide low-
income homeownership opportunities. Total income of these entities is about $30 million per
year TRD assumes that $10 million of that income is spent on construction materials and would
be eligible for the proposed deduction. Taxed at a statewide rate of 6.6 percent, the proposal
would reduce gross receipts tax collections by about $660 thousand. About 60 percent of that
revenue decrease would accrue to the general fund and the remaining 40 percent would accrue to
local governments.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
LFC notes that while individual deductions from the gross receipts tax may have small fiscal
impacts, their cumulative effect significantly narrows the gross receipts tax base. Narrowing the
gross receipts tax base increases revenue volatility and requires a higher tax rate to generate the
same amount of revenue.
The bill will reduce local government gross receipts tax collections. Many of New Mexico’s
local governments are highly dependent on gross receipts tax revenue.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The bill has no major administrative impacts on TRD.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
TRD notes that the term “low-income" should be defined, possibly in the same way low-income
is defined in federal statutes governing the low-income hosing tax credit.
SS/mt:nt