COMMITTEE ON LEGISLATIVE RESEARCH
OVERSIGHT DIVISION
FISCAL NOTE
L.R. No.: 0057-01
Bill No.: SB 304
Subject: Taxation and Revenue - Sales and Use; Counties, Cities, Towns and Villages; Education - Elementary and Secondary
Type: Original
Date: February 12, 2003
FISCAL SUMMARY
| FUND AFFECTED | FY 2004 | FY 2005 | FY 2006 |
| General Revenue | ($6,034,822) | ($4,873,526) | $0 |
| Total Estimated
Net Effect on General Revenue Fund |
($6,034,822) | ($4,873,526) | $0 |
| FUND AFFECTED | FY 2004 | FY 2005 | FY 2006 |
| School District Trust | ($1,291,644) | ($1,588,685) | $0 |
| Conservation | ($161,455) | ($198,586) | $0 |
| Parks and Soil | ($129,164) | ($158,868) | $0 |
| Total Estimated
Net Effect on Other State Funds |
($1,582,263) | ($1,946,139) | $0 |
Numbers within parentheses: ( ) indicate costs or losses.
This fiscal note contains 7 pages.
| FUND AFFECTED | FY 2004 | FY 2005 | FY 2006 |
| Total Estimated
Net Effect on All Federal Funds |
$0 | $0 | $0 |
| FUND AFFECTED | FY 2004 | FY 2005 | FY 2006 |
| Local Government | $0 | $0 to ($2,383,027) | $0 |
ASSUMPTION
Officials of the Department of Transportation (MoDOT) assume this legislation allows a temporary exemption from state and local sales tax on retail sales of clothing and school supplies before the start of the school year. No MoDOT funding is derived from sales tax on clothing or school supplies, therefore MoDOT assumes no fiscal impact.
Officials of the Office of Administration - Division of Budget and Planning (BAP) assume this proposal would allow for a sales tax "holiday" for a specified period for specified items.
BAP estimates the annual consumer spending in Missouri on clothing and shoes based on national estimates from the U.S. Department of Commerce - Bureau of Economic Analysis. BAP staff assumes Missouri represents 1.8% of U.S. totals. BAP assumes the increase for years 2002-2005 is the approximate average of the change for 2000 and 2001. BAP staff estimates taxable sales for FY2004 to be $6,104,000,000 and taxable sales for FY 2005 to be $6,257,000,000.
BAP states, as was the case with similar proposals from last year, there is no information available that addresses what percent of these expenditures would qualify for the exemption or how effective this program would be in so far as motivating the public to shop for clothing during the tax "holiday".
ASSUMPTION (continued)
BAP has estimated the level of Missouri consumer spending on "Stationary/School" supplies for FY04 at $182,000,000 and for FY05 at $186,000,000. The estimate is based on national data
from the U.S. Department of Commerce - Bureau of Economic Analysis. BAP assumes that Missouri represents 1.8% of the national total which is Missouri's share of U.S. personal income.
BAP assumes growth for 2001 and beyond, is the average of the increase for 2000 and 2001.
Also, BAP has estimated the level of Missouri consumer spending on "Computer, software, et al" supplies for FY04 at $638 million and for FY05 at $654 million. The estimate is based on national data from the U.S. Department of Commerce - Bureau of Economic Analysis. BAP assumes that Missouri represents 1.8% of the national total which is Missouri's share of U.S. personal income. BAP assumes growth for 2001 and beyond, is the average of the increase for 2000 and 2001.
Officials of the Department of Revenue (DOR) state this legislation establishes a sales tax holiday for clothing and school supplies for nine days in August. The state will reimburse the political subdivision for any lost revenues due to the exemption.
DOR assumes they are responsible for tracking and distributing the lost revenue portion back to the locals and subsequent impact associated with the local opt out provision. In order to track the lost revenue by locality the exempt sales will need to be separately stated on the sales tax return in a separate location (clothing/school supplies/personal computers) on the return (similar to food). The sales tax report for August will affect all registrants (annual, quarterly and monthly). DOR assumes this will most likely result in some single and two location voucher filers to report on a long form for at least one month/quarter. DOR will need one Tax Processing Technician l for every additional 34,000 errors generated, one Clerk ll in pre-edit for every 184,000 returns impacted and one Data Entry Operator l for every 170,000 returns impacted.
DOR will also need to send notification letters and a long sales tax form to approximately 100,000 sales tax accounts in August. DOR estimates the postage cost to notify the businesses will be approximately $37,000.
DOR assumes the MITS system will need to be modified to recognize the new item tax. The figures reported on the new item tax will need to be calculated and broken down into tax types in order to reimburse the lost revenue to the political subdivisions. The changes to MITS will require modifications to several tables, and distribution programs and registration subsystem. The above modifications will require 2,768 hours of programming at a total cost of $92,340. The
ASSUMPTION (continued)
State Data Center cost to implement the proposed legislation will be $18,013. DOR did not provide an estimate of revenue loss associated with this proposal.
Oversight has, for fiscal note purposes only, changed the starting salaries for the Tax Processing Tech I, Clerk II and Data Entry Operator I to correspond to the second step above minimum for
comparable positions in the state's merit system pay grid. This decision reflects a study of actual starting salaries for new state employees for a six month period and the policy of the Oversight Subcommittee of the Joint Committee on Legislative Research. Also, Oversight has reduced the amount requested for postage to reflect the bulk mailing rate.
Oversight assumes the mailing costs would be incurred in July before the August sales tax holiday. In addition, Oversight has included the programming costs and FTE requested since this legislation includes a reimbursement to local government for any local sales tax revenue lost for FY04 and it is assumed DOR will be required to track the sales tax revenue lost.
Oversight, for purposes of this fiscal note, has reflected the loss in sales tax revenue based upon the estimate provided by BAP and the actual impact similar legislation had on other states. The revenue estimate was based on 9/365 of the fiscal year taxable sales, resulting in a loss of $7.4 million in state funds due to the sales tax holiday for FY04, and $6.7 million in FY05. No adjustment was made for the $100 cap and the $50 cap. Also, no adjustment was made for any incentive effect this portion of the proposal might have on spending habits. The actual loss to state funds from this sales tax holiday could be significantly higher than estimated. Oversight assumes the Department of Revenue will enforce the provisions of the bill through post-audit in the field. If compliance is not monitored, the revenue impact could increase.
For a similar prior proposal, Oversight contacted three states that enacted similar legislation, the State of Texas, the State of Florida and the State of New York. Texas had a Sales Tax Holiday on clothing and footwear during a three day period in August, 1999. Florida had a nine
day sales tax holiday period on clothing and footwear in August, 1998, and New York has had several such "holidays" in 1997, 1998 and 1999. Oversight assumes that similar impacts would occur in Missouri and have applied their taxable sales during the holidays to the Gross State Product in Chained (1992) Dollars, by industry from the U.S. Census Bureau, the Official
Statistics, Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2000 to determine what Missouri's taxable sales in a similar period might be. The comparison reveals that by using the Office of
Administration, Budget and Planning's estimated sales of clothing and footwear in Missouri for a given fiscal year, a reasonable estimate could be made to the actual impact a sales tax holiday
ASSUMPTION (continued)
would have. Oversight assumes that the same impact will occur whether the exemption applied to clothing or shoes under $500 as it would for clothing under $100. Oversight also assumes that the results could be applied over a nine day exemption as it would for a six day exemption, as it would for a thirty-one day exemption.
This legislation might decrease Total State Revenues.
(10 Mo.) Reimbursement for loss in local sales
tax revenue GENERAL REVENUE FUND (10 Mo.) ALL OTHER STATE FUNDS (10 Mo.) Reimbursement Sales tax holiday ($1,162,479) ($1,429,816) Sales tax holiday ($953,211) LOCAL GOVERNMENT ($2,383,027) FISCAL IMPACT - Small Business This legislation could affect small businesses that collect sales tax on clothing. Sales tax paperwork
will be increased for the month that the "holiday" sales tax days are exempt. DESCRIPTION This proposal creates a sales tax holiday for articles of clothing valued at one hundred dollars or less
and school supplies valued at fifty dollars or less for six days in August. The holiday applies to both
state and local sales taxes. The state will reimburse local jurisdictions for revenue lost as a result
of this act for FY04. The proposal permits local political subdivisions to opt-out of the sales tax holiday in FY 2005, its
second year. The proposal establishes a "Sales Tax Holiday Joint Legislative Committee" to study and review the
effects of the holiday and report to the general assembly on or before January 8, 2005. The proposal has an emergency clause enacting it on July 1, 2003, and a sunset of July 1, 2005. This legislation is not federally mandated, would not duplicate any other program and would not
require additional capital improvements or rental space. SOURCES OF INFORMATION Department of Revenue Office of Administration Division of Budget and Planning Missouri Senate Appropriations Committee Annual Fiscal Report: Fiscal Year 2002 States of Texas, Florida and New York Department of Transportation Mickey Wilson, CPA Director February 12, 2003
FISCAL IMPACT - State Government
FY 2004
FY 2005
FY 2006
GENERAL REVENUE FUND
Cost - Dept. of Revenue (DOR)
Personnel (3 FTE)
($46,033)
($56,620)
$0 Fringe Benefits
($18,630)
($22,914)
$0 Expense and Equipment
($20,608)
($1,137)
$0 Programming
($110,353)
$0
$0 Postage
($26,800)
($26,800)
$0 Total costs - DOR
($222,424)
($107,471)
$0
Loss to General Revenue Fund
Sales tax holiday
($3,874,932)
($4,766,055)
$0
Transfer to Local Government
($1,937,466)
$0
$0
ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON
($6,034,822)
($4,873,526)
$0
FISCAL IMPACT - State Government
FY 2004
FY 2005
FY 2006
OTHER STATE FUNDS
Loss to School District Trust Fund
Sales tax holiday
($1,291,644)
($1,588,685)
$0
Loss to Conservation Fund
Sales tax holiday
($161,455)
($198,586)
$0
Loss to Parks and Soil Funds
Sales tax holiday
($129,164)
($158,868)
$0
ESTIMATED NET EFFECT TO
($1,582,263)
($1,946,139)
$0
FISCAL IMPACT - Local Government
FY 2004
FY 2005
FY 2006
Income from General Revenue
$1,937,466
$0
$0
Loss to Cities
$0 to
$0
Loss to Counties
($774,986)$0 to
$0
ESTIMATED NET EFFECT TO
$0$0 to
$0