BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    �




                                                                  AB 234
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          Date of Hearing:  January 9, 2012

                     ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE ON REVENUE AND TAXATION
                                Henry T. Perea, Chair

                  AB 234 (Wieckowski) - As Amended:  January 4, 2012


          2/3 vote.  Tax levy.  Fiscal committee.  
           
          SUBJECT  :  Income tax:  credits:  full-time employees:  hires  

           SUMMARY  :  Modifies and expands the existing hiring credit for 
          small businesses.  Specifically,  this bill  :  

          1)Provides an expanded credit of $4,500 for each net increase in 
            "qualified full-time employees" paid a qualified wage of less 
            than $16 per hour (or an equivalent amount if qualified wages 
            are paid other than on an hourly basis).  

          2)Provides an expanded credit of $9,100 for each net increase in 
            "qualified full-time employees" paid a qualified wage of more 
            than $16 per hour (or an equivalent amount if qualified wages 
            are paid other than on an hourly basis).  

          3)Restricts the credit's definition of a "qualified full-time 
            employee" to apply only to individuals who were unemployed for 
            the 30 days immediately prior to being hired.

          4)Provides that the credit's current definition of a "qualified 
            employer" (i.e., a taxpayer that, as of the last day of the 
            preceding taxable year, employed 20 or fewer employees) shall 
            only apply for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 
            2009, and before January 1, 2012.  For taxable years beginning 
            on or after January 1, 2012, a "qualified employer" is defined 
            as a taxpayer that, as of the last day of the preceding 
            taxable year, was any of the following:

             a)   A "disabled veteran business enterprise" as defined in 
               Military and Veterans Code Section 999(b)(7);

             b)   A "disadvantaged business enterprise" as defined in 
               Public Contract Code Section 2051(f);

             c)   A "microbusiness" as defined in Government Code Section 









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               14837(d)(2); or, 

             d)   A "small business" as defined in Government Code Section 
               14837(d)(1). 

          5)Lowers the total hour threshold, from 2,000 hours to 1,820 
            hours, for calculating an "annual full-time equivalent" in the 
            case of full-time employees paid on an hourly basis.  

          6)Provides that the modifications above shall apply to taxable 
            years beginning on or after January 1, 2012.

          7)Deletes duplicative sections of the Revenue and Taxation Code 
            as a housekeeping matter.

          8)Takes immediate effect as a tax levy.

           EXISTING LAW  :

          1)Allows various tax credits designed to provide tax relief for 
            taxpayers who incur certain expenses or to influence behavior, 
            including business practices.   

          2)Provides for the following geographically targeted economic 
            development areas (G-TEDAs):  Enterprise Zones, Manufacturing 
            Enhancement Areas, Targeted Tax Areas, and Local Agency 
            Military Base Recovery Areas.  Special tax incentives are 
            provided to taxpayers conducting business activities within a 
            G-TEDA.  These incentives include a hiring credit equal to a 
            percentage of wages paid to qualified employees.

          3)Allows a credit for taxable years beginning on or after 
            January 1, 2009, to qualified employers equal to $3,000 for 
            each net increase in qualified full-time employees hired 
            during the taxable year.  The credit is limited to small 
            businesses (i.e., taxpayers with 20 or fewer employees as of 
            the last day of the preceding taxable year).  The credit is 
            capped at roughly $400 million for all taxable years.  

          4)Defines a "disabled veteran business enterprise" as a business 
            certified by the administering agency as meeting all of the 
            following requirements:

             a)   It is a sole proprietorship at least 51% owned by one or 
               more disabled veterans or, in the case of a publicly owned 









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               business, at least 51% of its stock is unconditionally 
               owned by one or more disabled veterans; a subsidiary that 
               is wholly owned by a parent corporation, but only if at 
               least 51% of the voting stock of the parent corporation is 
               unconditionally owned by one or more disabled veterans; or 
               a joint venture in which at least 51% of the joint 
               venture's management, control, and earnings are held by one 
               or more disabled veterans;

             b)   The management and control of the daily business 
               operations are by one or more disabled veterans.  The 
               disabled veterans who exercise management and control are 
               not required to be the same disabled veterans as the owners 
               of the business; and,

             c)   It is a sole proprietorship, corporation, or partnership 
               with its home office located in the United States (U.S.), 
               which is not a branch or subsidiary of a foreign 
               corporation, foreign firm, or other foreign-based business. 
                

          5)Defines a "disadvantaged business enterprise" as a business 
            concern that is all of the following:

             a)   A "disadvantaged business" as that term is used in 
               Section 23.62 of Title 49 of the Code of Federal 
               Regulations; 

             b)   An individual proprietorship, partnership, corporation, 
               or joint venture; and, 

             c)   Organized for profit, with a place of business located 
               in the U.S. and which makes a significant contribution to 
               the U.S. economy through payment of taxes or use of 
               American products, materials, or labor.

          6)Defines a "microbusiness" as a small business which, together 
            with affiliates, has average annual gross receipts of 
            $2,500,000 or less over the previous three years, or is a 
            manufacturer, as defined, with 25 or fewer employees.

          7)Defines a "small business" as an independently owned and 
            operated business that is not dominant in its field of 
            operation, the principal office of which is located in 
            California, the officers of which are domiciled in California, 









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            and which, together with affiliates, has 100 or fewer 
            employees, and average annual gross receipts of $10,000,000 or 
            less over the previous three years, or is a manufacturer, as 
            defined, with 100 or fewer employees.

           FISCAL EFFECT  :  Franchise Tax Board (FTB) staff states that the 
          FTB is presently unable to provide a revenue impact estimate for 
          this bill.  Specifically, FTB notes, "The current New Jobs Tax 
          Credit calculates the credit on a "full-time equivalent basis" 
          by using the total hours worked by all employees to determine 
          how many new jobs were created.  This bill would allow a credit 
          based on the hourly wages paid to individual employees.  The 
          "full-time equivalent basis" calculation does not include hourly 
          wages paid or specific employee information.  As a result, it is 
          unclear how to determine which credit amount, $4,500 or $9,100, 
          would apply."   

           COMMENTS  :

          1)The author has provided the following statement in support of 
            this bill:

               AB 234 will expand a 2009 tax credit to Small, Micro, 
               Disabled Veteran, and Disadvantaged Businesses to stimulate 
               the economy and promote hiring in California.  California's 
               dominance in many economic areas is based, in part, on the 
               significant role small businesses play in the state's $1.8 
               trillion economy.  Businesses with less than 100 employees 
               comprise more than 98.3 percent of all businesses, and are 
               responsible for employing more than 57.9 percent of all 
               workers in the state.  Expanding this credit to Small, 
               Micro, Disabled Veteran, and Disadvantaged businesses will 
               allow a greater number of businesses to receive the tax 
               credit, and get more Californians back to work.  

               This bill will also stipulate that in order to receive the 
               tax credit, the individual that was hired must have been 
               unemployed for at least 30 days prior to being hired.  The 
               hiring of unemployed individuals will reduce the 
               expenditures of the unemployment fund.  In tough economic 
               times it is imperative that any funds we use to create 
               hiring incentives are used to hire unemployed individuals, 
               because it is the most cost-effective to the State of 
               California.  Lastly, this bill will increase the amount of 
               the tax credit from $3,000 per employee to $4,500 per 









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               employee making California minimum wage.  It will also 
               increase the credit to $9,100 per employee making at least 
               $16 an hour.  The changes to ABX3 15 (Stats. 2009, Ch. 10) 
               and SBX3 15 (Stats. 2009, Ch. 17) come from the policy 
               recommendations made in the PPIC report "How can California 
               Spur Job Creation?".  In our current economic conditions it 
               is imperative that �we] do everything we can to get 
               �Californians] back to work, by using the PPIC policy 
               recommendations we can ensure the best utilization of the 
               �state's] resources.  

          3)Committee Staff Comments:

              a)   What is a "tax expenditure"?  :  Existing law provides 
               various credits, deductions, exclusions, and exemptions for 
               particular taxpayer groups.  In the late 1960s, U.S. 
               Treasury officials began arguing that these features of the 
               tax law should be referred to as "expenditures," since they 
               are generally enacted to accomplish some governmental 
               purpose and there is a determinable cost associated with 
               each (in the form of foregone revenues).  This bill would 
               modify an existing tax expenditure program known as the 
               small business hiring credit.  

              b)   How is a tax expenditure different from a direct 
               expenditure?  :  As the Department of Finance notes in its 
               annual Tax Expenditure Report, there are several key 
               differences between tax expenditures and direct 
               expenditures.  First, tax expenditures are reviewed less 
               frequently than direct expenditures once they are put in 
               place.  This can offer taxpayers greater certainty, but it 
               can also result in tax expenditures remaining a part of the 
               tax code without demonstrating any public benefit.  Second, 
               there is generally no control over the amount of revenue 
               losses associated with any given tax expenditure.<1>  
               Finally, it should also be noted that, once enacted, it 
               generally takes a two-thirds vote to rescind an existing 
               tax expenditure absent a sunset date.  This effectively 
               results in a "one-way ratchet" whereby tax expenditures can 
               be conferred by majority vote, but cannot be rescinded, 
               irrespective of their efficacy, without a supermajority 
               vote.

             --------------------------
          <1> This is not so in the case of the existing small business 
          hiring credit, which is capped at roughly $400 million for all 
          taxable years.  








                                                                  AB 234
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              c)   Do hiring credits actually produce jobs?  :  With the 
               national unemployment rate hovering around 9%, some have 
               advocated job creation tax credits as a means of 
               revitalizing the struggling economy.  The question, 
               however, is whether such credits actually work.  Recently, 
               Daniel Wilson, assistant director of the Center for the 
               Study of Innovation and Productivity at the Federal Reserve 
               Bank of San Francisco, attempted to answer this question.  
               In a paper co-authored with Robert Chirinko of the 
               University of Illinois at Chicago, Wilson examined the 
               period between January 1990 and August 2009, and found 
               that, among states where employers could qualify for 
               credits immediately after enactment of the credit 
               legislation, there was a slight employment increase of 
               0.12%.  These findings would suggest that hiring credits, 
               at least at the state level, are a blunt tool for 
               stimulating job growth.  

              d)   How would this bill effect the existing small business 
               hiring credit program? :  The FTB reports that, as of 
               December 3, 2011, 12,903 personal income tax and business 
               entity returns had been filed, with cumulative hiring 
               credits totaling only $76 million.  At this rate, it could 
               take several years for the existing $400 million cap to be 
               reached absent significant growth in the economy.  By 
               expanding the pool of businesses that would qualify for 
               this credit, this bill could accelerate usage of the 
               existing credit allocation, thereby providing greater 
               short-term benefits.  At the same time, however, this bill 
               actually narrows the credit's definition of a "qualified 
               employee" to cover only those individuals who were 
               unemployed for the 30 day period immediately preceding the 
               date of hire.  While this revision is designed to 
               specifically target the hiring of unemployed individuals, 
               it could potentially create an unintended barrier to credit 
               utilization in some cases. 
                 
              e)   Implementation Concerns  :  Committee staff understands 
               that the FTB has identified numerous implementation 
               concerns with this bill.  At the time of this analysis' 
               completion, FTB's analysis had not yet been completed.  
               Committee staff will, however, work with the author's 
               office to address any concerns subsequently identified in 
               FTB's analysis.   









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              f)   Technical amendments  :  Committee staff recommends the 
               following technical amendments:

               i)     On page 5, line 30, delete "taxable years 
                 beginning"; 

               ii)    On page 6, line 6, replace "4,500" with "$4,500";

               iii)   On page 13, line 6, replace "net tax" with "tax"; 

               iv)    On page 13, line 7, replace "Section 17039" with 
                 "Section 23036"; and, 

               v)     On page 16, lines 24 and 25, re-insert stricken 
                 language.  
                
              g)   Related legislation  :  Committee staff notes the 
               following related bills introduced in the current 
               Legislative Session:

               i)     AB 11 (Portantino) would reduce the allocation for 
                 the existing small business hiring credit from roughly 
                 $400 million to roughly $200, and would allow a new 
                 credit equal to 20% of annual workers' compensation 
                 premiums paid by qualified taxpayers.  The total amount 
                 of the new credit, in turn, would be capped at roughly 
                 $200 million.  AB 11 is currently pending on this 
                 Committee's suspense file.    

               ii)    AB 236 (Swanson) would expand the existing small 
                 business hiring credit to encourage the employment of the 
                 chronically unemployed.  AB 236 is currently pending on 
                 this Committee's suspense file.  

               iii)   AB 1009 (Wieckowski) would modify and recast the 
                 existing hiring credit for small businesses.  AB 1009 is 
                 currently pending on this Committee's suspense file.  

           REGISTERED SUPPORT / OPPOSITION  :   

           Support 
           
          None on file 










                                                                  AB 234
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           Opposition 
           
          None on file 
           
          Analysis Prepared by  :  M. David Ruff / REV. & TAX. / (916) 
          319-2098