Legislature(2005 - 2006)SENATE FINANCE 532
08/07/2006 01:00 PM Senate SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON NATURAL GAS DEV
| Audio | Topic |
|---|---|
| Start | |
| Bob Malone, Chairman and President, Bp America | |
| Steve Marshall, President, Bp Exploration Alaska | |
| Bill Hedges, Manager, Corrosion Strategy and Planning, Bp | |
| John Norman, Alaska Oil and Gas Association | |
| HB3001 | |
| Robynn Wilson, Director, Department of Revenue, Tax Division | |
| Dan Dickinson, Economist, Consultant to Governor | |
| Bill Corbus, Commissioner, Department of Revenue | |
| Adjourn |
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
| += | HB3001 | TELECONFERENCED | |
CSHB 3001(FIN)-OIL/GAS PROD. TAX
CHAIR SEEKINS called the meeting back to order at 1:52:38 PM and
announced that CSHB 3001(FIN), Version P, was up for
consideration.
^ ROBYNN WILSON, Director, Department of Revenue, Tax Division
ROBYNN WILSON, Director, Tax Division, Department of Revenue
(DOR), explained that the bill does five things. It has a
variable rate depending on investment per barrel. Secondly,
because it's now a variable rate, a monthly calculation of the
tax rate is not practical. So this issue becomes an annual tax
return filing with monthly estimated tax payments to insure
consistent cash flow. Compared to the conference committee
version of the bill, one can note places where "monthly" has
been changed to "calendar year".
MS. WILSON said thirdly, version P breaks Section 160 into three
more user-friendly sections. Section 160 now provides the basic
production tax value framework; Section 165 contains the allowed
and disallowed lease expenditures; and Section 170 contains the
adjustments to lease expenditures that need to be made, for
example, when there is a sale of an asset. Some reordering has
also occurred and all the credits are now in AS 43.55.023, .024,
and .025.
She said some clarifying language had been inserted regarding,
for instance, disallowed items, overhead allowance, and the
interplay of operating agreements. The intention has not
changed, she stated, but perhaps the most important thing it
does is in AS 43.55.180. Required report: where, for example, it
was thought prudent to require the DOR to provide a report on
the reduced tax rates for private royalties. This version of the
bill greatly expands those responsibilities. So, rather than
having a couple of very small reports to do on a couple of
isolated aspects of the law, Section 180 now requires a
comprehensive report from the DOR on the entire chapter paying
particular attention to tax rates and the investment credits.
Also, Ms. Wilson said, as originally drafted, Section 180
required those two reports at two or three different points in
time. For example, one report was due in 2013 and 2015; all of
that has now been coalesced into one large report that will be
due the first day of the legislative session in 2011.
1:59:39 PM
MS. WILSON started her analysis of CSHB 3001(FIN), version P.
She said the first two pages weren't different from the
conference committee bill, but page 3, line 4, through page 4,
line 25, dealing with the variable tax rate, is where the new
language and the core of the bill lies.
She recalled the conference committee bill had a base tax rate
of 22.8 percent before progressivity was added. This bill
provides that the tax rate will depend on the level of
investment. So, subsection (f) says if the investment is equal
to or less than $1 per BTU equivalent barrel, the tax rate will
be 25 percent. If it's equal to or greater than $6 per BTU
equivalent barrel, the tax rate shall be 20 percent. Section (C)
provides for investments between $1 and $6 per BTU equivalent
barrel.
2:03:05 PM
MS. WILSON said some of the concern around an investment-based
tax rate (variable tax rate) was the potential it provided for
gold plating and the question is if the tax benefit of the $1
capital investment is in excess of the $1 investment. She
explained that this bill contains sort of a provision to take
care of that with the equation on page 4, line 12. It says if
the tax benefits are in excess of 75 percent of the capital
investment, the buying down of the tax rate will be limited.
She said the equation looks scary, but it basically says there
are four important tax benefit pieces that would accrue to the
producer for a capital investment. The first and obvious one is
that there is a tax deduction provided for in this bill. The
second principal benefit is if there's a capital investment
(CAPEX) credit of 20 percent. The third measurable benefit is
that with the CAPEX and given this tax plan, the producer is
realizing a benefit because he can buy down his tax rate [(.25 -
R)*PT]. At the same time, only a certain amount of these tax
benefits that change the production tax payable is borne by the
producer because a certain amount comes off his federal taxable
income. So in talking about the benefit of buying down the tax
rate, the federal benefit must be factored in. That is taken
into account in this equation by the [x (1-IR)](the highest
federal tax rate) piece.
MS. WILSON said the last major piece is the federal tax
deduction itself. If a CAPEX investment is being made, not only
will the producer be able to deduct that from the production tax
value for this tax, he can also deduct it from his federal
income tax return. It's not exactly a one-for-one, because on
the federal tax return capital expenditures will be depreciated
over a number of years. The sponsors felt these were four key
pieces. A couple of other things, like the state income tax
benefit when it's written off of the state corporate income tax
was not in the equation, but she reminded people that it is a
world-wide calculation based on an apportionment percentage. So,
the impact for state corporate income tax is fairly small. The
sponsors felt that these were the four main benefits and that's
the reason they were taken into account in this formula.
2:08:14 PM
She noted however that this is not the perfect drafting; the
equation should be solving for "R" and it has been turned into a
pretty complex quadratic formula. So, it was felt that an
accountant would find it easier to pick out the tax credit piece
or the federal deduction piece using this formula. She
anticipated that the actual quadratic formula would be contained
in regulations and that is the background to the equation in
line 12.
MS. WILSON said the progressivity piece was in subsection (g) on
page 4, line 26; the slope for that calculation is .25 percent
on page 5, line 2. The trigger, the price at which the
progressivity kicks in, is the net production tax value per
barrel - $40 - and that is on line 9. The other difference she
pointed out was that the progressivity tax shall not exceed 25
percent (on page 5, line 6). For comparison, she said the
conference committee bill had a $35 trigger with a slope of .175
percent. It had a combined rate of 50 percent derived from
adding the basic tax rate to the progressivity, which could not
exceed 25 percent. In this bill, because the base tax rate
varies just between 20 and 25 percent based on investment, the
progressivity tax is on top of that and the progressivity,
itself, cannot exceed 25 percent.
SENATOR DYSON asked if progressivity could not exceed an
additional 25 percent.
MS. WILSON replied yes; the maximum base rate is 25 percent in
addition to the progressivity. If applicable, that progressivity
could provide an additional 25 percent on top of that.
2:10:42 PM
MS. WILSON said the tax rate for private royalties had been
moved and reordered from AS 43.55.011 (f) to subsection (i) on
page 5, line 14, to make it a little more readable. She said
subsection (j) on page 5 contains the Cook Inlet oil and gas ELF
provisions and those are the same as in the conference committee
bill. The tax is calculated using the basic tax rules for the
production tax value generated by Cook Inlet gas and oil and
that result is compared to the ELF result for those two things -
and the tax is the lower of the two - basically an ELF ceiling
for Cook Inlet gas and oil - the very same language that was in
the conference committee in AS 43.55.011, but it shows up in a
different subsection.
MS. WILSON noted that new language was added on page 6, lines 6
- 8 to clarify how the calculation is made for the comparison,
but it does not change the purpose or function of the Cook Inlet
gas or oil provisions. That very same language is on lines 25 -
27. New subsection (l) on page 6 is the Cook Inlet oil section.
Language on page 7, lines 5 - 9, clarifies how the tax reduction
and the ELF ceiling in Cook Inlet would be accomplished. This is
important because the base tax rate could utilize CAPEX credits,
but they could not be used against the progressivity tax.
She said the next important section starts on page 8, line 27,
and gives the rules for the so-called estimated tax installment
payments while eliminating the safe harbor provision. A key
element is that the federal interest rate will apply both ways.
She noted that AS 43.55.020(a) on page 8, line 27, sets out the
rules for how the estimated tax payments are calculated. AS
43.55.020(g) on page 11, line 17, talks about the interest that
applies on the over or underpaid estimated tax installment
payments referencing IRC 66.21 and 66.22. These rates are set
and published quarterly by the Treasury Department. She said
there is a fairly robust rate for underpayments, but the rate
for overpayments is quite a bit lees. She emphasized that these
are rules that the producers are very familiar with and the
rates are less than Alaska's statutory rate, which is now over
11 percent.
She explained the way it worked was if an estimated or an
installment payment were underpaid, then the interest would run
from the date of that payment due date until March 31. On March
31, the true-up happens and at that point, if the underpayment
is still there, then that becomes an addition to the tax. So at
that point, the federal interest rate stops and the state
statutory rate kicks in again at 11.25 percent. Subsection (g)
deals with underpayments of tax and (h) deals with overpayments
of tax. She explained that rather than the 95 percent safe
harbor with interest that just went one way, the sponsors felt
that this would be more fair both ways. She believed the current
federal interest rate for underpayments is about 10 percent.
2:18:40 PM
MS. WILSON reiterated that the CAPEX credit sections had been
changed to AS 43.55.023(a), but the substance hadn't been
changed. She noted the CAPEX credit is still at 20 percent on
page 12, line 24. The subsection that deals with the losses that
can be converted to a credit and be carried forward to the next
year is on page 13, line 14. Generally, that was intended to be
carried forward based on the tax rate. At this point the state
has a variable tax rate and the sponsors felt that 20 percent
was the appropriate rate to bring that loss forward.
MS. WILSON said the transitional tax credits start on page 15,
line 26, subsection (i). The additional nontransferable tax
credits from section 170 are now on page 17, starting on line
23. AS 43.55.024(a) is the new area development credit - the
same language from the conference committee bill except that
here it reflects the $6,000,000 for a calendar year as compared
to the conference committee, which was monthly and said $500,000
per month. The base allowance credit of $12 million is on page
18, line 8, and that was previously in section 170. She said the
exploration credits are still in AS 14.55.025 on page 19, line
16.
2:21:31 PM
MS. WILSON drew members' attention to the four areas of the
state mentioned in Section 160, page 25, line 22 - the North
Slope, the area south of the Brooks Range that is not the Cook
Inlet (a new area of development), the Cook Inlet oil, and the
Cook Inlet gas - and pointed out that the conference committee
substitute contained the same structures. The reason she
referred to these in four areas is because they are treated
slightly differently with special rules. The new area south of
the Brooks Range that is not Cook Inlet enjoys the new area
development credit. Cook Inlet oil and Cook Inlet gas have the
ELF ceiling. She said the drafter spread out Section 160 so that
the areas are delineated clearly.
She said another change in that section is on page 25, lines 25
- 31. The conference committee bill language said, "oil and gas
produced from a lease or property in the state" and against
that, the producer could take expenditures regarding that lease
or property in the state suggesting that somehow the bill was
requiring individual accounting lease by lease by lease of the
production tax value and that was never the intention. So,
language in CSHB 3001(FIN) had been changed to say, "from leases
or properties" (lines 25 and 28). On page 26, the very same
change is on lines 1 and 7, because the new area development
credit is applicable to those. Subparagraphs (C) and (D) deal
with Cook Inlet oil and Cook Inlet gas, and in that instance,
the ELF ceiling is property by property. So, it still says "from
a lease or property". This looks like inconsistent language, she
said, but that is the reason it is not.
MS. WILSON explained that language on page 26, line 21, says the
progressivity will be calculated on a monthly basis, but it will
still be reported on the annual tax return. So, paragraph (2)
says the "monthly production tax value" of the following four
sections. The changes are the same as in (A) and (B) (changing
from "a lease or property" to "leases or properties").
2:25:38 PM
MS. WILSON said that page 28, line 20, now says, "In determining
whether costs are lease expenditures, the department shall
consider" and goes on to say "typical industry practices and
standards". She explained that the key difference from previous
versions of the bill, is that "shall consider" was added because
sponsors heard a fair amount of discussion about substantial
weight and that language had been added to bring clarity to the
weight different things are given.
She noted that line 23 contained a very important phrase that is
also in the previous bill. It says that the department shall
consider typical industry practices "other than the items
(prohibited deductions) listed in (e) of this section,". This
means that whatever industry practices are, if it's a prohibited
expense on this next list, it's prohibited. Page 29 has the same
language on line 25 [regarding (e) and prohibited deductions].
MS. WILSON said clarifying language was also added on page 30,
line 8, to "overhead allowance" for the same reason. It now says
a reasonable percentage shall be allowed for overhead, but it's
a reasonable percentage of the costs that are allowable. "The
intention was always to provide a percentage of the direct
costs."
She said the same clarification could be found at the top of
page 31, line 1. She pointed out that (e) on line 6 contained
the list of disallowed expenditures. That list is the very same
as in the conference committee bill.
2:28:56 PM
MS. WILSON said that Section 180 on page 25 requires the
Department of Revenue to prepare a report, which is due the
first day of the 2011 regular session. However, paragraphs (1)
and (2) expand the reporting requirements significantly saying,
"the effects of the provisions of this chapter on oil and gas
exploration, development, and production in the state, on
investment expenditures...." So she asked the committee to pay
particular attention to the tax rates provided under AS
43.55.011.
2:30:02 PM
MS. WILSON said she hadn't pointed out each word change relative
to the change from monthly filing to annual, but she noted that
language on page 36, lines 9 - 10 and lines 27 - 28, clarify
that spill fees are due on March 31. The last change is on page
37, lines 27 - 31, and while "BTU equivalent" is not new
language, it has been moved from one of the subsections to the
general definitions because it has been utilized in a couple of
sections.
In terms of transition timing, she said, the previous bill
provided for 10 months. However, this bill with an annual filing
and monthly estimated tax payments, provides that for the rest
of 2006, the payments would be made under the current existing
rules with a true-up on March 31, but that starting in the
January the estimated tax installment payment would be due at
the end of February. That is closer to the six-month transition
period that was in the governor's original bill and was changed
to 10 months during House committee action.
2:31:54 PM
SENATOR DYSON said there was some discussion about not allowing
the producers to have a deduction for the money they spend
trying to influence the legislative process and he asked if the
federal government allows such a deduction and if she had ever
talked about not allowing those as business expenses in her
experience with the state.
MS. WILSON replied that she didn't know the federal rule, but
this bill said that activity would be almost impossible to
deduct as a lease expenditure. If it's not a lease expenditure,
it cannot be deducted and you cannot get a capital credit for it
either. Clearly it would not be an immediately allowable
expenditure. She said further references on pages 30 and 31 talk
about lobbying expense being a reasonable percentage of allowed
costs.
SENATOR DYSON said he was referencing 26USC162(E).
CHAIR SEEKINS asked Mr. Dickinson to comment on lease
expenditures on page 28, line 12.
^ DAN DICKINSON, Economist, Consultant to Governor
DAN DICKINSON, Economist, Consultant to the Governor, responded
that lobbying expenses weren't normally seen as an ordinary and
necessary direct cost. In reference to Senator Dyson's question,
he would have to follow up on whether the feds disallow it, and
if they do, find out if it's ordinary and necessary with a
special disallowance for it or do they simply say it's not
ordinary and necessary. He agreed with Ms. Wilson's comment on
it.
SENATOR STEDMAN said he was curious about how the offsets work
in the tax formula.
2:36:17 PM recess 2:39:03 PM
CHAIR SEEKINS called the meeting back to order and recognized
that Representative Kelly joined the committee.
MR. DICKINSON introduced the "Selection of Higher Rate Table"
and said he wanted to focus on how to calculate the tax rate,
which in this bill would always be a number between 20 percent
and 25 percent. He said this algebraic formula is compared to
ELF as being complex and one of the major differences he always
points out is that the ELF can drive a company's tax down to
zero, but this formula can only drive it down to a number
between 20 and 25 percent. This bill has a way to get at the tax
rate by looking at the amount of investment a company is making
and while there were some problems with that, he wanted to
explain the concept first using his tables. Investments [per
barrel] up to $1 don't get any tax relief, he said, and this
covers the stuff a company needs to purchase for basic health
and safety that can be capitalized under the federal tax system.
So, a company's tax rate starts at 25 percent and a basic amount
of capital has to be spent every year. As per-barrel spending is
increased, the tax rate goes down and this is set up with a
fairly simple mathematic relationship. So, for example, going
from an investment of $1 to $2 per barrel will make a tax rate
fall from 25 percent down to 24 percent. Spend an additional $1
per barrel and your tax rate falls to 23 percent. If you spend
up to $4 on production per barrel, it falls to 22 percent. At
$6, you hit the floor of 20 percent and as you spend additional
dollars per barrel, you get no further tax relief.
2:46:07 PM
He showed the committee his five-step calculation under five
different investment scenarios. It indicated that the investors
would get lower tax rates and the harvesters would get higher
tax rates. He said this calculation has a huge flaw that has to
be corrected which is that at high very high prices (like
today), when you begin to mess with the tax rate, the effect
overwhelms the capital investment and that can lead to a
situation called gold plating.
Gold plating happens when someone who is producing 300 million
barrels a year goes out and spends an additional $300 million,
so their tax rate drops by 1 percent. But at $70 a barrel, that
300 million barrels is worth over $20 billion in tax rate. So,
just by making a $300 million investment, a company gets $200
million back immediately and that's before credits, federal
income taxes, state income taxes, and a whole host of other
effects have been accounted for. Situations can be found within
the realm of quite reasonable numbers where somebody could spend
$1 and get tax breaks of almost $1.80. That - everybody agrees -
is a terrible effect. It leads to situations where a company is
spending money solely for purposes of the tax break, not because
it's going to increase production and not because it makes
sense. Even gold plating opportunities companies don't like to
engage in it.
MR. DICKINSON said that is why he built a formula that made sure
gold plating doesn't occur. The calculation of "R" in step 2
prevents it by offering two alternative calculations and
basically a company is going to have to pay a tax rate at the
higher of the two. He walked the committee through how the "R"
kicks in under the $20 column.
2:50:01 PM
Turning to the next table, Mr. Dickinson showed how once the
comparison is done, you find out what your tax rate is going to
be. If oil prices are $100 and you only make a $2-investment per
barrel, you're still at 25 percent. It doesn't go down to 20
percent until roughly $15 a barrel is being invested - or five
times what current rates are. So, at very high prices, the
benefit is not picked up quite as quickly. The danger is if
somebody finds a way to do that, in which the state would have
to make sure it is looking at the real costs. He further
enlightened the committee:
In some sense, what this shows is the "R" factor means
that at these high prices, basically folks are going
to be very near on the 24, 25 percent range and it's
going to take quite a bit of spending to drive them
down to the 20 and 21 percent range. On the other
hand, if you go down to $20 and $30 [price per barrel
of oil] that we expect to be in, what you will see is
folks can expect to be at a 20-percent tax rate a lot
of the time.
2:52:22 PM
SENATOR STEDMAN said he wanted to compare this with a flat 22.5
percent tax rate - simplicity versus complexity.
MR. DICKINSON said he could print out a graph at a 22.5 percent
tax rate for his comparison.
2:56:58 PM
SENATOR DYSON asked if the administration was comfortable with
this approach and did he feel he could negotiate this kind of a
scheme with the producers.
^ BILL CORBUS, Commissioner, Department of Revenue
BILL CORBUS, Commissioner, Department of Revenue, responded that
the administration supported its original 20/20 concept. He
couldn't answer how it would address this concept.
2:58:46 PM
MR. DICKINSON went on to step four that added progressivity at
different prices. At $50 and below, progressivity brings in zero
- subtracting an assumed OPEX and transportation cost of $12
(this takes you below $40). At $60, you hit zero because with an
$8 CAPEX and a $12 OPEX you get down to $40. But at any price
above that, there is progressivity. Step five shows the net
effect of the 20 - 25 percent rate mechanism and the
progressivity.
3:01:35 PM
SENATOR BUNDE asked what would be the tax rate at the current
rate of investment if prices were at $70.
3:02:21 PM
MR. DICKINSON replied that he would go through an example of
today's investments at the end of his comments. His next
illustration showed what happens at $1 per barrel investment and
the weaknesses of the system. He said that decreasing the
volumes in the denominator has the same effect as increasing the
volumes in the numerator. His illustration showed what kind of
relationship could be seen in a wide range of investments.
3:03:50 PM
MR. DICKINSON said that everything he had talked about with his
300 million barrel example concerned the entire North Slope, but
he pointed out that the North Slope is not a single tax payer.
So, he took numbers from ConocoPhillips that lined up closely
with numbers he developed in looking at the three major
producers' investments per barrel over the last five years. BP
ranged from a high of $5 to a low of around $2. ConocoPhillips
ranged from a high of $5 to a low of about $2.50. ExxonMobil
ranged from a low of about $2 to a high of about $3. The others
are folks who are just investing like Anadarko and Pioneer.
He said the final box showed the combined data. BP is at about
$3, so they would be able to knock $2 down (because the first $1
doesn't count) and would probably go from 25 percent down to the
23 percent range; ConocoPhillips is closer to $4 - knock off $1,
and they would go from 25 percent to the 22 percent range;
ExxonMobil is about $2 and knocking $1 off would take them from
25 percent to 24 percent. The others would typically be found at
20 percent or the lowest rate because they are well over the $6
per barrel.
3:06:25 PM
SENATOR STEDMAN asked him to go over how the formula would work
year by year.
MR. DICKINSON responded that the rate essentially resets every
year and amounts to the total capital for that year divided by
the production. So a two-year building program would drive the
rate down during those two years and as soon as production
started and construction subsided, the rate would go up again.
SENATOR STEDMAN and Senator Elton both discussed how the formula
would work with Mr. Dickinson.
SENATOR STEDMAN asked what the tax rates in 2006 would be using
the formula.
MR. DICKINSON replied that the average base tax rate would be
21.5 percent across all the producers. On the investment side,
ConocoPhillips spent on average $2 a barrel more than either BP
or ExxonMobil; so the totals would be different for all the
players.
3:13:01 PM
SENATOR ELTON said that given current events, he was going to
assume that in 2007 BP may see a large increase in capital
expenditures and that those additional capital expenditures
would make its tax rate go down from 23 to 22.5 percent if this
formula were adopted.
MR. DICKINSON replied yes - if it's adopted. He said, however,
that simply replacing pipe, however much it is, may not be that
expensive compared to other things. For example in 2001, BP
spent $600 million, almost double its average, on creation of
the North Star unit - an entire unit, an island, a sub-sea
pipeline, and those kinds of things. But today BP is talking
about replacing standard pipe, which he didn't believe would be
out of the range of numbers seen here today.
3:15:18 PM
SENATOR BEN STEVENS said he didn't think those costs would
impact BP alone.
MR. DICKINSON agreed and added that one of the anomalies of
Prudhoe Bay is that BP is a minority owner and that ExxonMobil
and ConocoPhillips are each picking up $.37 of each dollar
spent; BP would only be picking up $.26.
3:16:12 PM
SENATOR WILKEN asked if the colored chart accounted for
inflation.
MR. DICKINSON replied no and added that the sponsors of the bill
didn't want inflation on any of the markers so that only real
increases in spending would be seen.
3:19:21 PM
MR. DICKINSON explained that the Produce or Pay Plan (POP)
basically means that a company is investing more than it is
getting in profits, putting it in a 20 percent tax bracket. His
model compared it to the PPT and the status quo. He started with
a value of $73.46 and assumed an OPEX and transportation cost of
$12 and a CAPEX that is simply the 2006 estimate. Using 300
million barrels and deducting the royalty barrels he came up
with 262 million barrels for a price of $56.83 per barrel. This
generates a value of $15 billion in PPT taxable value. Subtract
$40 from $56.83 and the resulting $16.83 is the profit the
progressivity is calculated on. The baseline profit is $3.7
billion, but because they are making a $4.63 investment and the
first $1 is knocked off, that leaves $3.63. Subtract 3.63
percent from 25 percent and that results in 21.3 percent, which
saves about a $.5 billion on what is getting taxed. The tax for
this year under this bill would be $3.6 billion. Under the
original PPT bill it would be about $1.1 billion less ($2.5
billion); under the status quo it would be $1.3 billion.
3:26:02 PM
SENATOR STEDMAN asked if he could also compare the tax scheme
from the last conference committee bill and add the effective
tax rate calculation.
SENATOR BUNDE added that he also wanted to see the government-
take figures.
MR. DICKINSON responded that he could get those figures for
comparison and also observed that the governor's bill and the
status quo falls within the range of some of the other bills
passed.
3:27:40 PM
SENATOR ELTON said he wanted to see these figures based on
Department of Revenue oil price projections for the next year.
MR. DICKINSON responded that he would see those in the fiscal
note.
SENATOR STEDMAN asked if they could just use a particular number
rather than getting wrapped up in the day's price.
MR. DICKINSON replied that he typically does that.
SENATOR WAGONER asked since the gold plating correction was just
a percentage coming off of the base rate, would that require
extra auditing.
MR. DICKINSON replied that it wouldn't take away the need for
auditors because DOR would still have to know capital
expenditures and the total tax base. The auditing would be
identical to any other bill that has the capital credits. The
four items - total capital expenditure, total production tax
value, the tax rate (highest marginal rate according to federal
code) used in the calculation will not require additional
auditing.
SENATOR WAGONER asked how many auditing positions the department
is short now.
MS. WILSON replied the department had hired a few auditors since
the first of the year and one production tax auditor position is
left vacant; this does not include the income tax auditors. She
agreed with Mr. Dickinson that this bill does not change
auditing duties. The department's fiscal note shows a slight
decrease - a tax technician position - due to going to a yearly
filing from monthly filings.
3:31:31 PM
MR. DICKINSON said that last page in his model walked through
the calculation for ExxonMobil.
3:35:26 PM
CHAIR SEEKINS commented that ExxonMobil doesn't quite double its
tax bill.
MR. DICKINSON replied that was correct.
CHAIR SEEKINS observed that on average, this bill would bring a
tax bill to about 272 percent.
MR. DICKINSON replied that is correct and explained that one way
to think about this is that currently Prudhoe Bay has a tax rate
of 12 percent of gross. ConocoPhillips has the Alpine field and
BP has North Star with similar tax rates, but for the second
largest field in United States, Kuparuk (50 percent owned by
ConocoPhillips, a smaller share by BP, and less than 1 percent
by ExxonMobil) its tax rate is going from zero to something
approaching 20 percent. So, the investors beyond Prudhoe Bay,
under any bill that moves away from paying the zero ELF, will
see the largest increase.
3:37:09 PM
CHAIR SEEKINS pointed out that the tax rate doesn't affect all
oil companies the same way; it depends on where their fields are
located.
3:37:27 PM
SENATOR BEN STEVENS wanted to talk about the Chair's comment
repealing ELF or keeping it in place as a temporary stop-gap
measure during this time of uncertainty. He observed if they
keep the current system in place, Kuparuk would still not be
subject to production tax.
MR. DICKINSON said that was correct. Simply repealing the ELF
would be a big increase in places with a low ELF and almost no
increase in those fields, which have a high ELF and Kuparuk has
a zero ELF now.
SENATOR BEN STEVENS said his point is that the petroleum
production tax is designed to include all production into the
realm of being taxed. He said that Kuparuk would not be included
in the formula if they would merely repeal the ELF as a stop-gap
measure.
MR. DICKINSON clarified if the ELF were repealed, Kuparuk would
have a huge payment.
SENATOR BEN STEVENS asked what if it was changed a little bit.
MR. DICKINSON replied there are ways it could be changed to
affect Kuparuk; if you just played with the parameters it might
not be effected. He said this was the conclusion of his
presentation.
SENATOR STEDMAN asked if he would do a summary table of prices
at $50 and $30 along with the $70 using a constant CAPEX to make
the model easier to work with.
MR. DICKINSON replied he would.
3:42:48 PM at ease 3:52:59 PM
CHAIR SEEKINS called the meeting back to order and announced
that Dr. Van Meurs would comment next.
DR. ^Dr. Pedro Van Meurs, Economist, Consultant to the Governor
PEDRO VAN MEURS, Consultant to the Governor, said he was
concerned about the overall impression he was getting that
either lawmakers prefer something that is very simple that
doesn't work or something complex that doesn't work, but he also
noticed that something simple that works doesn't seem to get the
votes. He repeated that is what concerns him. He elaborated:
When I gave my first recommendation to the Governor, I
said it's very simple. Do it like anywhere else in the
world. We have lots of experience in how the simple
systems work. You just take a percentage of net
profit, give some incentive, like a tax credit, and
you will get exactly a simple system that's easy to
administer. It has no problems and international
experience proves that it works. And we now have a
House bill that has many, many, good features. I
believe there's a major progress on the text of the
earlier bill. I do believe that the whole methodology
of monthly payments is a simple system - just having
interest payments at the end of the year if you over
or under pay - I think that's great simplification and
it is very sound. But what I'm also particularly happy
with is that a lot of the wording about cost control
has been significantly tightened up and I think, so
generally speaking, Mr. Chairman, I think much of the
bill is very much improved relative to earlier
concepts.
I'm also pleased that the House has come up with a
progressivity formula that I feel personally very
comfortable with. As you know, previously, I had urged
the various committees to take the dollar figure where
you start the progressivity somewhat high - $40 or $45
- but after that you could have a strong
progressivity. So, the $40 and a .25, I think
definitely meets those standards, as I had recommended
earlier when I recommended against the $35.
As I said, the item that I was somewhat concerned
about is the matter of the rate that has been
discussed here. I'm a PhD in economics and I have
spent now three days trying to fully comprehend all
the economic impacts and I'm still not 100 percent
ready, but I promise you if you want to get some
economic overview and if you're interested in that, I
can have it ready for you tomorrow morning early, if
that is of interest to the committee.
Now, so consequently, I'm concerned about the fact
that that system is just too complex. I believe it is
too complex and I have concerns; I have some
preliminary views on that which I would be happy to
share if you're interested. I can provide a more fully
economic documentation tomorrow, if you're interested.
So, consequently [those] are very important issues.
Senator Wagoner also asked my views as to what could
be done to enhance the gross character of bill...more
on gross and less on net and I believe there are some
things that can be done in the bill. I believe
personally that a floor as has been suggested a number
of times - say like in HB 3004 - a floor whereby you
say okay for instance at $25 a barrel we have at least
4 percent of gross or something in that nature and
then maybe go down from there if the price declines -
something similar to HB 3004. I believe that could be
an enrichment of the bill - not from an economic point
of view. I personally don't believe that the - say
economically such an issue is not strictly necessary.
I believe that the net system works, but I do believe
that there is considerable concern out there among the
people in Alaska and concerned like oh, if companies
just keep deducting all these costs, we may end up
with less than what we have now and a floor concept
would help.
Another way of strengthening the gross character a
little bit would be to restrict somewhat further the
deductible costs. We have, as I mentioned before, in
the legislature and particularly to your committee,
Mr. Chairman, I think we have a laundry list of items
that are not lease expenditures and that are therefore
not deductible and therefore not subject to tax
credits that is very long. And I testified before that
that list is very much in line with even the most
stringent international standards. But it is possible
to add some items to the list if Senators feel very
strongly about these matters. So, I believe it is
possible to enhance the gross character of the bill
somewhat through maybe a floor or through maybe some
further additions to the non-deductible items.
So, basically, Mr. Chairman, that is my very initial
view. I believe that the text of the House bill is
clearly an improvement over what has been there
before. I'm very pleased with much of the language. I
think it is really protecting Alaska very well. I
think the progressive feature, although of course that
is not in the Governor's bill - but I have been
testifying here about that - I believe that is very
much in line with what I think a well-designed
progressive feature would be. I'm concerned about the
great complexity of this PPT rate-structure, which I
believe could cause quite serious gold plating. And I
believe it is possible to maybe enhance the gross
character of this bill somewhat if there would be
interest on the part of the Senators to do so. If
there are any questions, I would be glad to answer
them.
4:02:00 PM
SENATOR WAGONER asked if the formula in item (f) on page 3,
lines 12 - 25, were taken out and a percentage (the conference
committee come up with 22.8) were put in, would that be the
right place to put it.
DR. VAN MEURS replied that the Governor proposed a 20/20 plan,
but from a structural point of view, if section 5 (e)[page 3,
lines 5 - 11] simply said 22.8 percent, he would be so much
happier with that than with everything that is now under (f). He
reiterated that this formula is horrendously complex, but his
formula, which was based on extensive modeling, was very simple.
It is no more than multiplying, dividing, and subtracting. The
problem with the new formula is that all the factors start
interacting quite a bit.
If you assume that the tax rate is a constant and if
you take a given value for the production tax, then
really what this formula does is relating the PPT rate
to the qualified capital [QC] expenditures as a
percentage of the production tax value. Now, it is
easy to see the easiest way to start with this formula
is simply set QC at zero.
He went through the formula [on page 3] that demonstrated if a
company would not invest one dime, its base rate would be 25
percent. Then he said you ask how much of a company's net profit
it has to spend to bring the rate down and basically, if a
company would spend 23 percent of its net profits in Alaska, the
rate would be 20 percent. In plain language, he figured that
this formula says if a company reinvests at least 23 percent in
Alaska, it gets to keep the other 77 percent and would be able
to take it out of Alaska - and also get rewarded with a PPT rate
of 20 percent. In his mind, that is a harvester's formula and
the philosophy behind it wouldn't encourage investors to
reinvest.
4:07:15 PM
SENATOR WAGONER asked if this bill is salvageable with certain
changes.
DR. VAN MEURS replied that this whole section is complex. He had
verified that all Mr. Dickinson's math for steps 1 - 5 was
correct, but what concerned him still was that the formula does
not prevent gold plating; it merely slows it down under very
high prices.
After doing a back-of-the-envelope calculation and hearing there
could be very large new expenditures in the Prudhoe Bay field,
Dr. Van Meurs said his initial assessment of section (f) is that
20 percent of the expenditures would be paid by the oil industry
and 80 - 90 percent would be paid by the state through a
reduction of the PPT. He didn't know how enthusiastic Alaskans
would be to step forward and pay for that much of the repair
costs.
That is what I mean with gold plating. The State of
Alaska would pay a very high share of any incremental
investment and that is caused by firstly the tax
credits that we have, then the deductions, then the
reduction of this rate, which gives the PPT reduction
even more. And then don't forget, we still have the 2
for 1 system, which was an additional credit on top of
that. So, by the time you add it all up, in my
calculations, in the $60 - $80 range, you get
something like Alaska paying 80 - 90 percent of any
repairs in the Arctic through reductions of PPT and
personally I would be very concerned about that.
4:10:34 PM
SENATOR WILKEN, referencing a graph asked if the state didn't
need some component of inflation-proofing across the top in
order to keep up with inflation-proofing down the side for a
deal as long as 25 years.
DR. VAN MEURS replied that was another deep concern, so he had
done some preliminary modeling on it. He elaborated:
The first thing to remember is that this formula is a
dollar-per-barrel formula. In other words, if a
company starts at 22.5 percent, in nominal dollars, as
long as they decline their investment at the same rate
as the decline of the production, the rate will stay
constant. But, or in other words, if your production
declines 8 percent, then you can let your nominal
investment decline by 8 percent and you will still pay
the 22.5 percent rate - because it is dollars-per-
barrel. So consequently your rate stays constant as
long you decline your investment along with your
declining rate of production.
Now, this issue is further aggravated that if you
would want to look at real investment, if you want to
correct for inflation, what this formula is saying you
can significantly faster decline your investment than
the decline of the field, because as long as you are
in constant dollars equal to the decline of the field
you can still add the 3 percent decline on top of
that. Or in other words, if you have 3 percent
inflation and the oil field declines by 8 percent,
your investments can decline by 11 percent and you
will still pay the same 22.5 percent rate. So, that
again is another deep concern that I have, but I think
adjusting for inflation really wouldn't help. I think
there are very fundamental problems with this concept.
SENATOR WILKEN said it seems like if the formula was investment
in barrels, the state could have a slight increase in investment
and a slight decrease in barrels and the tax rate either stays
the same or it goes down and that is the opposite of what they
were trying to do.
DR. VAN MEURS replied that he was absolutely correct. He
reiterated that his initial economic analysis shows that
starting at 22.5 percent, if a company decides to increase its
investments by 10 percent per year in nominal terms for three or
four years and lets its production decline by 8 percent, in four
or five years its PPT goes down to 20 percent and would stay
there.
SENATOR WILKEN said he was perplexed. He asked what the House's
response was to this basic premise. He asked Dr. Van Meurs if he
told them what he told the Senate.
DR. VAN MEURS said he did not testify on this specific issue in
the House. He suggested that the House do a production-based
formula [a produce or pay concept (POP)], which it didn't go
for. His suggested formula guaranteed that the state would get
production because that was its goal. He emphasized again that
there is great virtue in simplicity and that he would only
recommend a complication if it was needed to get this PPT
passed. Again he said:
We know international that a system that is simple
works. It worked in Norway; it worked in Alberta; it
works in the Canadian Arctic; it works everywhere; it
works in Australia; it works everywhere where
governments have already now 20 or 30 years
experience. As I mentioned the 20/20 - I could explain
it in five minutes to the Governor. You just take 20
percent of the net income and you give a 20 percent
tax credit - and that's the whole system. That's all
there is to it. Simple. And now we are here with
something that is so complex, that even I need three
days to figure it out.
So, consequently, my strong suggestion is why not go
back to and rethink this? Is it really so difficult to
do something simple? Is it really so objectionable to
do something simple? Why we can't just have a simple
percent; and why can't we just have a simple tax
credit? Everybody in the world does it; everybody in
the world is successful with it; everybody in the
world has stimulated investment and I think it was
actually an interesting experience today seeing
suddenly Prudhoe Bay being shut down. It was a
sobering look in the future. That's how Alaska may
look like 15 years from now if you don't stimulate
reinvestment. And that is so important; that is so
important of a simple system that stimulates
investment. Other nations know it does; it cannot be
abused; it doesn't have all kind of these unknown side
effects that these complex formulas have and that is
why I appeal to you to really consider - and I appeal
to the House - to really consider something simple.
There is great virtue in simplicity.
4:19:34 PM
SENATOR WILKEN thanked him for that explanation and asked if he
had offered some economic analysis.
DR. VAN MEURS replied that he could have an analysis ready
tomorrow of the features he just mentioned.
4:21:41 PM
CHAIR SEEKINS asked if he could be more specific about what he
believed is a harvester's formula.
DR. VAN MEURS replied that most nations that want to encourage
reinvestment think that a majority of net profits should be
reinvested. That should be a goal, not just 23 percent.
4:23:22 PM recess 4:24:18 PM
CHAIR SEEKINS said they had requested a lot of charts and graphs
from Mr. Dickinson and Dr. Van Meurs, so he announced the
meeting would resume at 9 am tomorrow. There being no further
business to come before the committee, he adjourned the meeting
at 4:25:03 PM.
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