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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Carraro
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/2/07
2/3/07 HB
SHORT TITLE
Military Pension Income Tax Exemption
SB 493
ANALYST Francis
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
($5,910.0)
($23,640.0)
($19,700.0) Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Military.com
Responses Received From
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate bill 493 exempts the retirement income or pension from the personal income tax for any
person or spouse of a person honorably discharged from the armed forces and served in the
armed forces on active duty continuously for 90 days.
The effective date is January 1, 2007.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The annual impact for exempting the retirement income of retired members of the armed forces
is expected to reduce personal income tax revenues by $19.7 million. Due to the timing of the
effective date, 30 percent of the reduction in tax year 2007 accrues to FY07, or $5.9 million. The
other 70 percent plus 50 percent of tax year 2008 accrues to FY08 which totals $23.6 million. In
future years, the tax year impact is distributed evenly between the fiscal years.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 493 – Page
2
The fiscal impact is based on 22,000 retired armed forces in New Mexico with a total of $460
million in pension income. The assumed effective income tax rate is 4.3 percent based on TRD
analysis.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The language in the bill refers to the spouse but not to a surviving spouse which may have been
the intent. A surviving spouse may be implicitly included because that would be one way for a
spouse to receive military pension income but the language could be more precise.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
The following table shows all of the bills currently under consideration:
207 H Cote ARMED FORCES INCOME TAX EXEMPTION
368 H Sandoval ARMED SERVICE RETIREE INCOME TAX EXEMPTION
497 H Foley MILITARY RETIREMENT PAY TAX EXEMPTION
541 H Anderson ARMED FORCES INCOME TAX EXEMPTION
43 S Robinson MILITARY PENSION INCOME TAX EXEMPTION
492 S Carraro ARMED SERVICES INCOME TAX EXEMPTION
493 S Carraro MILITARY PENSION INCOME TAX EXEMPTION
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
TRD:
The measure would encourage military retirees to move to New Mexico. It is possible that
this group of individuals possesses substantial work skills that would benefit New Mexico
economic development efforts. It is sometimes argued that this group places relatively
modest demands on infrastructure (education, law enforcement, etc.) than other segments of
the population.
Individuals with incomes and other circumstances similar to people receiving the proposed
exemption are likely to view it as unfair, especially when they compete with the retirees for
jobs, and when the retirees are individuals with relatively high incomes. According to
information on the “military.com" website (http://usmilitary.about.com/), military retirement
pay can be over $9,000 monthly for high-ranking officers retiring in 2004.
The fiscal impact shown above does not reflect estimates of the potential “feedback" effects
of the proposals on the size of the New Mexico economy. Such effects might arise, for
example, if tax reductions increase investment or attract new workers to the state. At present,
the department does not have reliable means of estimating the magnitude of these effects and
their potential impact on state revenues.
By reducing state tax obligations, the proposed measure would tend to increase federal tax
liability because state tax obligations are deductible against federal liability. Hence the net
taxpayer benefit would be less than the $880 per claimant mentioned above. The $600 in
state tax savings would, for example, be reduced to $704 ($880 x .8) for a taxpayer in the
20% federal tax bracket.
NF/nt