The aerospace industry remains in Washington, offering wages and
benefits above the state average. The preferences improved competitiveness by reducing
the industry's effective tax rate by 50%. Employment has declined from its 2013 level,
but it is unclear to what extent the preferences prevented greater job loss.
Review focuses on nine tax preferences intended to benefit the aerospace
industry
In 2013, the Legislature expanded a package of aerospace tax
preferences that was initially enacted in 2003. The preferences include three
preferential business and occupation (B&O) tax rates, two B&O tax
credits, two sales and use tax exemptions, a property tax exemption, and a
leasehold excise tax exemption. Detail is provided in Appendix A.
To claim a preference, a business must perform at least one of these
activities:
Manufacture commercial airplanes.
Develop aerospace products (e.g., airplanes, components, repair equipment,
and tooling).
Repair aircraft.
The preferences are scheduled to expire July 1, 2040.
Estimated Biennial Beneficiary Savings
$569 million in the 2021-23 Biennium
Tax Types
Business and Occupation Tax, Sales and Use Tax, Leasehold Excise Tax,
Property Tax
The preferences lower the cost of doing business. The aerospace industry remains
in Washington, and its employees earn wages above the state average and are provided
benefits.
The Legislature stated three public policy objectives when the preferences were
initially enacted in 2003, and added a fourth policy objective when extending the
preferences in 2013.
Objectives (Stated)
Results
Reduce the cost of doing business in Washington for the aerospace
industry compared to other states.
Met. The preferences save beneficiaries more than $500 million per
biennium. They improve the state’s competitive position by cutting the
industry’s effective tax rate by at least 50%, making the rate lower than 5
out of 13 competitor states. (Tab 1)
Encourage the continued presence of the aerospace industry in
Washington.
Met. Aerospace continues to be a major industry in Washington.
However, it is unclear to what extent the preferences influenced location
decisions. (Tab 2)
Provide jobs with good wages and benefits.
Met. Aerospace industry employees earn wages and benefits well above
the state average. (Tab 3)
However, aerospace employment is lower than it was in 2013. It is unclear whether
the preferences prevented greater job losses.
Objectives (Stated)
Results
Maintain and grow Washington's aerospace industry workforce.
Unclear. Washington aerospace employment is lower than it was in
2013, but higher than when the preferences were first enacted in 2003. (Tab 3) If the preferences led Boeing to remain in Washington,
they may have kept the state from losing more jobs. If not, they reduced
government spending and may have contributed to job losses. (Tab 4)
Recommendations
Legislative Auditor's Recommendation: Clarify
The Legislature should clarify its expectations for the level of aerospace industry
employment. Providing additional detail in the tax preference performance statement
such as a baseline level of employment would facilitate future reviews of these
preferences.
The Commission endorses the Legislative Auditor's recommendation with comment. The
tax preference continues to meet the majority of stated objectives. However, the
employment objectives are ambiguous. The commission recommends the Legislature
clarify its position on employment levels.
Regardless of how the Legislature clarifies this issue, the Legislature must be
very cautious in how it interprets and responds to employment changes as a factor in
the preference’s efficacy. The industry, like manufacturing in general, are rapid
adopters of new technology that enhances productivity. This has the potential to
significantly lower the labor input over time. Also, business cycle events, which
are outside the industry’s control, may lead to significant declines in employment
that can persist for several years. In addition, the Legislative Auditor’s research
and aerospace industry testimony shows that the industry provides above-average
investment spending, wages and benefits, and workforce training. None of these areas
can be captured by an analysis of changes in employment.
Given the above, employment changes by themselves are insufficient for evaluating
the preference’s efficacy. Therefore, the commission recommends that the Legislature
continues to evaluate the preference on a regular cycle using a range of objectives,
with employment levels being only one of the considerations. The current JLARC
process, based on multiple objectives, provides the most transparent and valid
method for determining the degree to which the majority of objectives are met and
whether or not the Legislature needs to adjust the preference.
1. Preferences reduce costs and improve competitiveness
The preferences improved Washington's competitive position by
cutting the industry’s effective tax rate by at least 50%
Over 600 beneficiaries have claimed seven of nine preferences
In 2003, the Legislature approved a package of aerospace tax preferences. In 2013, it
extended the preferences' expiration date from 2024 to 2040. The preferences
include:
Three preferential business and occupation (B&O) tax rates.
Two B&O tax credits.
Two sales and use tax exemptions (expanded in 2013).
One property tax exemption (unclaimed).
One leasehold excise tax exemption (unclaimed).See Appendix A for details.
The tax preferences reduce the cost of doing business for the aerospace industry and
other beneficiaries
A business may claim one or more of these preferences if it manufactures commercial
airplanes, develops aerospace productsAirplanes, airplane components, airplane repair equipment, and tooling used in
manufacturing commercial airplanes, or repairs aircraft. Businesses
in the aerospace industry were the primary beneficiaries, although firms in related
industries also claim the preferences.
The aerospace industry includes businesses that file taxes under North American
Industry Classification System (NAICS) code 3364--Aerospace Product and Parts
Manufacturing. Boeing is the largest aerospace business in Washington, and the
state's largest private employer.
Related industries include architectural and engineering services, durable goods
wholesaling, and fabricated metal product manufacturing.
From fiscal year 2014 through fiscal year 2017, 664 businesses saved $1.1 billion by
claiming the preferences. Beneficiaries in the aerospace industry claimed 93% of the
savings. Detailed savings estimates for each preference are in Appendix
A.
Exhibit 1.1: Beneficiaries save more than $500 million per biennium
Biennium
Fiscal Year
Estimated Fiscal Year Beneficiary Savings
Estimated Biennial Beneficiary Savings
2013-2015
7/1/13-6/30/15
2014
$223 million
$528 million
2015
$305 million
2015-2017
7/1/15-6/30/17
2016
$304 million
$543 million
2017
$239 million
2017-2019
7/1/17-6/30/19
2018
$246 million
$501 million
2019
$255 million
2019-2021
7/1/19-6/30/21
2020
$267 million
$545 million
2021
$278 million
2021-2023
7/1/21-6/30/23
2022
$282 million
$569 million
2023
$287 million
Source: JLARC staff analysis of tax return data - total savings may not equal sum of
detailed estimates due to rounding.
Independent consultant's tax accounting analysis concludes that the preferences
improved Washington’s competitiveness relative to other states
Four steps in Ernst & Young analysis to evaluate business tax climate
Estimate the rates of return and all taxesIncluding all state and local taxes a business may
pay, including sales, property, and B&O or income tax as
applicable paid by hypothetical small and large
aerospace firms that invest in new manufacturing facilities.
Estimate the reduction in rate of return due to taxes. As shown in the
hypothetical example below, the reduction due to taxes is the difference
between the pre-tax and after-tax rates of return.
Express the reduction as an effective tax rate.
Estimate the reduction in ETR due to statutory
incentivesExamples: preferential B&O
rates, sales and use tax exemptions and negotiated incentivesExamples:
tax abatements, cash grants. If incentives reduce taxes
in the above example by half, the effective tax rate would be reduced to
10%.
JLARC staff hired Ernst & Young to evaluate the business tax climate for the
aerospace industry across Washington and 13 other benchmark states. Benchmark states
include those with the highest concentration of aerospace employment and those
identified as leading states by recent studies of aerospace competitiveness. The
analysis considers statutory incentives (including Washington's aerospace tax
preferences), negotiated incentives, and cash grants provided to the aerospace
industry. Appendix
B has additional detail about the analysis and a link to the full report.
According to the analysis:
For the hypothetical large firmA
firm with 10,000 employees, the incentives reduce the effective
tax rate from 20.9% to 10.0%. This improves the state's competitive ranking from
thirteenth to ninth out of 14 states with a large aerospace presence (see Exhibit
1.2).
For the small firmA firm with 50
employees, the incentives reduce the effective tax rate from 15.8%
to 6.1%. This improves the state's competitive ranking from eleventh to eighth place
(see Appendix B).
In Washington, statutory incentives reduce the effective tax rate more than
negotiated incentives. Other states use more negotiated incentives.
For this study, the effective tax rate (ETR) includes all state and local taxes a
business may pay, including sales, property, and B&O or income tax as
applicable.
Washington's statutory incentives lower the ETR for large firms by 9.4 percentage
points (from 20.9% to 11.5%). Negotiated incentives reduce the ETR another 1.5
percentage points – from 11.5% to 10.0%. Cash grants are prohibited by the state
constitution.
Several of the benchmark states offer significant negotiated incentives and cash
grants that enhance their competitiveness compared to Washington.
When only statutory incentives are applied, Washington ranks fourth out of the 14
states for large firms.
When all types of incentives are considered, Washington places ninth for large
firms.
Exhibit 1.2: Washington's tax preferences improve its tax competitiveness
Note: Post-incentive ETR includes statutory incentives, negotiated incentives, and
cash grants.
Source: Ernst & Young analysis.
Proposed Final Report | Aerospace Tax Preferences
December 2019
REVIEW Details
2. Aerospace remains a major Washington industry
Aerospace continues to be a major industry in Washington.
However, it is unclear to what extent the preferences influenced location
decisions.
Economic and employment data show that the aerospace industry has continued its
presence in Washington
BEA aggregates industries when measuring gross domestic product
The aerospace industry includes businesses that file taxes under North
American Industry Classification System (NAICS) code 3364--Aerospace Product
and Parts Manufacturing.
Other Transportation Equipment Manufacturing includes the
aerospace NAICS group and three other industry groups related to the
manufacture of railroad rolling stock, ships and boats, and other
transportation equipment.
Data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) indicates that:
Nationally, the Other Transportation Equipment Manufacturing industry,
which includes aerospace, contributed $148 billion to the gross domestic product
in 2017. Washington's contribution – $32.4 billion – was 22% of the national total
and more than any other state.
In the 4th quarter of 2018, 198 businesses in the Aerospace Products and Parts
Manufacturing industry (NAICS 3364) employed 85,900 workers in Washington.
Although employment has declined in recent years (see Tab
3), it continues to be larger than in any other state, representing 17% of
national industry employment.
The concentration of aerospace value and jobs in Washington (location quotient)A location quotient measures the
concentration of a given industry in a given place relative to a larger region
such as the nation is greater than the national average. In 2017,
the value of goods and services made by Washington's Other Transportation
Equipment Manufacturing industry, as a portion of the state's economy, was 8.2
times greater than the national average. In 2018, the relative concentration of
aerospace industry jobs in the state was 7.3 times the national average.
Exhibit 2.1: Washington's aerospace industry leads nation in contribution to GDP and
industry employment
Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Bureau of Labor Statistics.
On average, beneficiaries provide wages and benefits that meet or exceed state
averages
The preferences aim to provide "good wages and benefits." Since these terms are not
defined, JLARC staff compared wage and benefit data for preference beneficiaries to
data from Washington's manufacturing industry in general.
Washington's average annual wage for manufacturing is just over $76,000. It is
$62,000 for all industries.
Beneficiaries of the aerospace tax preferences reported to the Department of
Revenue (DOR) that 72% of their employees earned more than $30 per hour (about
$62,000 annually) in 2017, and that more than 90% of employees are enrolled in
medical, dental, and retirement plans.
Employment Security Department (ESD) data shows that between 2016 and 2017,
beneficiaries paid employees an average annual wage greater than $100,000.
This data is consistent with information from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).
According to BLS, aerospace industry businesses in Washington paid a total of $9.5
billion in wages in 2017, averaging $114,000 per employee. The average annual wage is
the fourth highest of any state in the country for the industry and is above the U.S.
average aerospace wage of $101,000.
Exhibit 2.2: Beneficiaries paid employees more than $108,000 per year in 2017
Source: JLARC analysis of ESD Data, DOR Tax Return Data, BLS Quarterly Census of
Employment and Wages (QCEW) Data.
Boeing is the largest business in Washington's aerospace industry
Boeing is the largest aerospace business in Washington, and the state's largest private
employer. Boeing reported Washington employment at the end of 2018 was 69,800,
representing 46% of total company employment, more than in any other state. Boeing
estimates its supply chain network includes 1,500 supplier and vendor businesses in
Washington, on which the company reported spending more than $5 billion in 2017.
Exhibit 2.3: Washington has the nation’s largest share of aerospace and Boeing jobs
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics and Boeing.
The company's aircraft deliveries have increased since 2013, and Boeing reported
delivering a record number of aircraft in 2018. Most of the aircraft were assembled in WashingtonBoeing
assembles all 737, 747, 767, 777, and Boeing Business Jets in Washington. It uses
two assembly lines for the 787 – one in Everett, Washington, and one in North
Charleston, South Carolina.. Still, airplane orders outpaced
deliveries, and Boeing states that its order backlog is more than 5,800 aircraft. The
company estimates that this backlog represents seven years of airplane production.
Exhibit 2.4: Boeing airplane deliveries have increased
Source: JLARC representation of Boeing data.
Industry has met statutory contingencies to locate a manufacturing program in
Washington
The 2013 Legislature put two contingencies in the law:
Contingency
Outcome
The preference would not take effect until a significant commercial airplane
manufacturing program was located in Washington.
The Department of Revenue (DOR) determined that the contingency was satisfied
in 2014 after Boeing located the final assembly of the 777X and its composite
wing facility in Everett.
The preferential B&O tax rate ends for the products made at the
manufacturing site if DOR determines that any portion of that program has moved
outside Washington.
This contingency has not occurred.
Influence of preferences on continued presence of industry unclear
JLARC staff are unable to determine the degree to which the aerospace tax
preferences, particularly their 2013 extension and expansion, contributed to the
continued presence of the aerospace industry in Washington.
To assess the impact of the preferences on employment and presence in the state, it
is necessary to know the extent to which businesses make decisions as a result of the
incentive. Boeing's decision to locate final assembly of the 777X and its composite
wing facility in Washington ensured that the 2013 extension of tax preferences took
effect. However, it is unknown whether the company would have made this location
decision even if the preferences had not been extended.
Research literature and staff interviews with subject matter experts indicate that
taxes – and the availability of tax incentives – are just one of many factors that
influence business location decisions. Other factors include the quality of
transportation infrastructure, labor costs, workforce quality, and the regulatory
environment.
While some literature indicates that tax preferences influence a minority of
business location decisions, using such a general assumption is not possible when
evaluating an incentive's impact on a single location decision.
An advisory panel of economic and labor experts convened by JLARC staff agreed
with the staff conclusion that it is not feasible to analytically determine whether
one factor (e.g., tax incentives) led a single business to make a location decision.
For additional analysis of Boeing's potential location decisions, refer to Tab
4.
Proposed Final Report | Aerospace Tax Preferences
December 2019
Review Details
3. Jobs above 2003 level, but decline since 2013 highest in the nation
Washington's aerospace employment is higher than when the
preferences were first enacted in 2003. However, since 2013, Washington has lost more
aerospace jobs than any other state.
Aerospace industry employment trending down, but still above 2003
Since 2003, when the preferences were first enacted, aerospace industry employment
followed two major trends:
Statewide aerospace employment (yellow line) grew from 2003 through 2012.
From 2003 through 2012, Washington aerospace employment increased by 56%, as the
state added 34,500 jobs. Of these new jobs, 32,400 were at Boeing, which increased its
employment by 60% (blue line).
Employment declined from 2012 through 2018. From 2012 through 2018, Boeing
employment in Washington fell by 16,700. This was partially offset by gains by other
aerospace businesses, so Washington's total aerospace employment fell by 10,800.
Despite the decline, statewide aerospace and Boeing employment remained 38% and 29%
above 2003 levels, respectively. JLARC staff do not assert a causal relationship between
these trends and legislative action to create the preferences in 2003 and extend them in
2013.
Exhibit 3.1: Both Boeing and statewide aerospace employment trending down since 2013,
but still above 2003 levels
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics and Boeing.
Washington aerospace employment losses since 2013 lead the nation
In 2013 the Legislature extended the aerospace tax preferences with the stated public
policy objective to maintain and grow industry employment.
Washington's loss of 8,800 aerospace jobs from 2013 through 2018 was the largest in the
U.S. and nearly four times more than in any other state. This represented a 9% decline,
the second largest percentage decline among states with at least 10,000 aerospace
employees in any year between 2013 and 2018.
Over the same period, U.S. aerospace employment (excluding Washington) increased 7%
or 27,000 jobs. This cut the state's share of total industry employment from 19% to
17%.
International aerospace employment increased 6% from 2013-17, according to data from
Deloitte.
Exhibit 3.2: Washington's aerospace employment decline was the largest among states
with a significant aerospace presence
The composition of Washington's aerospace employment has shifted, as non-Boeing
employment grew
From 2013 through 2018, Boeing employment fell by 12,100 jobs. During this period,
non-Boeing aerospace employment increased by 3,300 jobs. Boeing's share of Washington
aerospace employment fell from 87% in 2013 to 81% in 2018.
Boeing job losses were greater in Washington than in other states.
Boeing's global employment fell by 15,400 from 2013 through 2018, a 9% decline. This
decline disproportionately affected Washington, which accounted for 79% of job losses.
As a result, the state's share of Boeing employment declined from 49% to 46%.
Boeing's Washington employment rebounded from 2017 to 2018, rising 6% to 69,800. Total
company employment also grew in this period, resulting in a 1-percentage-point reduction
in Washington's share of company employment.
Non-tax factors contribute to employment changes, but the extent of their effect is
unclear
Media coverage of Boeing's wing facility has drawn increased attention to the role of
technology and automation in aerospace manufacturing. From 2003 through 2018,
Washington's aerospace industry saw increases in both output per employee (i.e., labor
productivity) and total employment. OutputMeasured as gross business income per employee
increased 83% from $565,000 in 2003 to $1,032,000 in 2018, while employment was up 38%.
However, the effect of labor productivity growth on employment is unclear. Some
literature points to outsourcing, rather than automation, as a driver of manufacturing
employment changes. JLARC staff are unable to quantify the extent to which productivity
changes influenced aerospace employment independent of other factors.
It is unclear whether industry employment meets legislative expectations
Without further information about the Legislature's expectations for aerospace industry
employment, JLARC staff are unable to determine whether recent changes meet the public
policy objective to maintain and grow aerospace industry jobs.
Proposed Final Report | Aerospace Tax Preferences
December 2019
Review Details
4. Effect of preferences on jobs unclear
If the preferences led Boeing to remain in Washington, they may
have kept the state from losing more jobs. If not, they reduced government spending and
may have contributed to job losses.
How did extending the preferences affect employment? It depends on whether they
influenced Boeing's decision to remain in Washington.
In extending the aerospace tax preferences, the Legislature sought to secure final
assembly of the new 777X and the composite wing facility in Washington. As required,
Boeing located its new facility in Washington. It is unclear whether Boeing would have
made the same decision if the preferences had not been extended. Whether Boeing was
influenced by the preferences has direct implications on the effect of the extension
on employment.
JLARC staff modeled three hypothetical scenarios of what could have happened if the
preferences were not extended. They illustrate a range of potential employment
outcomes.
Reading the results of the economic analysis
Model results are presented as jobs potentially lost or gained as a result of
Boeing's decisions in the event the preferences had not been extended.
Total jobs includes jobs in three categories: "State and Local
Government," "Aerospace Products and Parts Manufacturing," and "Private
Nonfarm (Excluding Aerospace)."
The job numbers include direct, indirect, and induced jobs. See
Appendix C for explanations of these terms.
JLARC staff used REMIThe Regional
Economic Models, Inc. (REMI) model can be used to estimate the effects of a policy
change to model three hypothetical scenarios that illustrate the
range of what could have happened if the Legislature had not extended the preferences
in 2013. JLARC staff developed assumptions based on discussions with an advisory
group, testimony in support of the 2013 legislation extending the preferences, and
estimates of Boeing's direct 777 workforce. Because REMI is calibrated to Washington's
economy in 2016, the first year of the analysis is 2017.
JLARC staff are not able to determine the likelihood that any of these scenarios
would have occurred absent the extension of the tax preferences, or whether one is
more likely to have occurred than another. They serve to illustrate the range of
potential outcomes and the large employment multiplier of aerospace jobs in
Washington's economy.
Appendix D provides additional detail about the REMI analysis.
If the preferences led to Boeing's location decision, they may have prevented
greater job losses
Aerospace employment has decreased since 2013 when the preferences were extended (Tab
3). However, scenarios 1 and 2 model the removal of additional aerospace jobs to
simulate Boeing's decision to move airplane production out of state. The decline in
aerospace jobs leads to a much larger drop in private sector employment, due to the
high multiplier effect of aerospace jobs.
In the REMI model, aerospace jobs have a multiplier of over 4, meaning that for
every aerospace job lost, an additional four jobs are lost economy-wide.
The high multiplier stems from the industry's high wages (e.g., supporting jobs in
retail or construction) and from the number of industries in Washington that supply
goods and services to the aerospace industry (e.g., engineering services and machine
shops).
Scenario 1: Boeing locates 777X production and the composite wing facility outside
Washington. Boeing's decision to move the 777X out of state has no bearing on location
decisions for future aircraft lines.
Assumptions
The preferences were not extended, and as a result:
Boeing moves 12,100 employeesEstimated 777X workforce out of state over five years as
777X production ramps up and production of the old model is phased out.
Boeing builds the composite wing facility outside Washington, and the
state forgoes the benefits of $1 billion in construction and 500 jobs at the
wing facility.
State government spending increases beginning in 2025 due to higher tax
revenue as the preferences expire. Beneficiary production costs are
increased by the same amount.
Results
The hypothetical loss of the 777X production line results in the loss of
70,400 jobs statewide by 2021 (estimated).
Employment rebounds slightly when
the original preferences expire in 2025, resulting in an increase in revenue
collection and government spending.
By 2040, REMI estimates total job losses of 71,600.
Exhibit 4.1: Scenario 1 shows a hypothetical loss of 12,100 Boeing jobs linked to
777X production could have resulted in loss of an estimated 71,600 jobs statewide
Source: JLARC staff analysis using REMI.
Scenario 2: Boeing locates 777X production and subsequent generations of airplanes
outside Washington.
Assumptions
The preferences were not extended, and as a result:
Boeing moves 80%This
scenario was considered by the Office of Financial Management (OFM) in
its analysis for the 2003 aerospace tax preferences and was included in
JLARC's 2014 report on the preferences. of its workforce
(estimated at 60,500 employees) out of state over fifteen years, as all new
production lines are sited out of Washington.
Boeing builds the composite wing facility outside Washington, and the
state forgoes the benefits of $1 billion in construction and 500 jobs at the
wing facility.
State government spending is increased beginning in 2025 due to higher tax
revenue as the preferences expire. Beneficiary production costs are
increased by the same amount.
Results
The hypothetical loss of Boeing jobs results in the loss of 340,600 jobs
statewide by 2031 (estimated).
Total job losses reach an estimated 364,500
by 2040.
Exhibit 4.2: Scenario 2 shows a hypothetical loss of 80% of Boeing jobs for new
production lines could have resulted in loss of an estimated 364,500 jobs statewide
Source: JLARC staff analysis using REMI.
If the location decision happened regardless of the preferences, then they reduced
overall statewide employment after 2025
Scenario 3, models the effect if Boeing built the 777X and composite wing facility in
Washington without the tax preferences. The implicit assumption is that the
preferences – if passed – would have had no effect on the company's decision.
Scenario 3: Boeing sites 777X production in Washington despite the preferences not
being expanded and extended.
Assumptions
The preferences were not extended. Boeing builds the 777X in Everett without
them, and as a result:
Government spending is increased beginning in 2025, as the expiration of
the preferences leads to higher tax receipts.
Beneficiary production costs are increased by the same amount as the
additional tax revenue.
Employment and capital expenditures are unchanged from the baseline.
However, the capital expenditure is subject to sales and use tax, as this
expenditure would not have qualified for the exemption absent the 2013
expansion.
Results
The impacts to employment result from the non-expansion and subsequent
expiration of the preferences:
Absent the expansion of the sales and use tax exemption for airplane
manufacturing facilities, the tax due on the composite wing facility's
construction is estimated to contribute to a small employment decline in the
early years of the forecast.
Higher production costs due to the expiration of tax savings result in a
drop in aerospace employment beginning in 2025, with the decrease reaching
200 by 2040.
Statewide employment is largely unchanged from the baseline until 2025,
when the preferences' expiration increases government spending by an amount
equal to estimated beneficiary savings.
All of these effects net to an estimated 4,700 job increase by 2040.
Exhibit 4.3: Scenario 3 indicates if 777X siting would have happened without tax
preferences, increase in government spending could have offset minor aerospace job
losses
Source: JLARC staff analysis using REMI.
The Legislative Auditor cannot determine if the preferences maintained or grew
aerospace employment
Since there is uncertainty as to how the preferences influenced Boeing's facility
location decision, it is not possible to draw a definitive conclusion about whether
the preferences resulted in maintaining or growing employment.
Proposed Final Report | Aerospace Tax Preferences
December 2019
Review Details
Section 5: Applicable Statutes
The aerospace tax preferences are codified in several sections of
statute
If only selected language in a section of law is relevant, that relevant language is
highlighted.
(1) Upon every person engaging within this state in the business of making sales at
retail, except persons taxable as retailers under other provisions of this chapter, as
to such persons, the amount of tax with respect to such business is equal to the gross
proceeds of sales of the business, multiplied by the rate of 0.471 percent.
(2) Upon every person engaging within this state in the business of making sales at
retail that are exempt from the tax imposed under chapter 82.08 RCW by reason of RCW
82.08.0261, 82.08.0262, or 82.08.0263, except persons taxable under RCW 82.04.260(11)
or subsection (3) of this section, as to such persons, the amount of tax with respect
to such business is equal to the gross proceeds of sales of the business, multiplied
by the rate of 0.484 percent.
(3)(a) Until July 1, 2040, upon every person
classified by the federal aviation administration as a federal aviation regulation
part 145 certificated repair station and that is engaging within this state in the
business of making sales at retail that are exempt from the tax imposed under
chapter 82.08 RCW by reason of RCW 82.08.0261, 82.08.0262, or 82.08.0263, as to such
persons, the amount of tax with respect to such business is equal to the gross
proceeds of sales of the business, multiplied by the rate of .2904
percent.
(b) A person reporting under the tax rate
provided in this subsection (3) must file a complete annual report with the
department under RCW 82.32.534.
[ 2014 c 97 § 402; (2014 c 97 § 401 expired July 9, 2014); 2013 3rd sp.s. c 2 § 7;
2010 1st sp.s. c 23 § 509; (2010 1st sp.s. c 23 § 508 expired July 1, 2011); (2010 1st
sp.s. c 23 § 507 expired July 13, 2010); 2010 1st sp.s. c 11 § 1; (2010 c 114 § 106
expired July 1, 2011); 2008 c 81 § 5; (2007 c 54 § 5 repealed by 2010 1st sp.s. c 11 §
7); 2006 c 177 § 5; 2003 2nd sp.s. c 1 § 2; (2003 1st sp.s. c 2 § 1 expired July 1,
2006). Prior: 1998 c 343 § 5; 1998 c 312 § 4; 1993 sp.s. c 25 § 103; 1981 c 172 § 2;
1971 ex.s. c 281 § 4; 1971 ex.s. c 186 § 2; 1969 ex.s. c 262 § 35; 1967 ex.s. c 149 §
9; 1961 c 15 § 82.04.250; prior: 1955 c 389 § 45; prior: 1950 ex.s. c 5 § 1, part;
1949 c 228 § 1, part; 1943 c 156 § 1, part; 1941 c 178 § 1, part; 1939 c 225 § 1,
part; 1937 c 227 § 1, part; 1935 c 180 § 4, part; Rem. Supp. 1949 § 8370-4, part.]
SELECTED NOTES:
Contingent effective date—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See RCW 82.32.850.
Findings—Intent—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See note following RCW 82.32.850.
Findings—Savings—Effective date—2008 c 81: See notes following RCW 82.08.975.
Finding—2003 2nd sp.s. c 1: See note following RCW 82.04.4461.
Tax on manufacturers and processors of various foods and by-products—Research and
development organizations—Travel agents—Certain international activities—Stevedoring
and associated activities—Low-level waste disposers—Insurance producers, surplus line
brokers, and title insurance agents—Hospitals—Commercial airplane activities—Timber
product activities—Canned salmon processors. (Effective January 1, 2018.)
(1) Upon every person engaging within this state in the business of manufacturing:
(a) Wheat into flour, barley into pearl barley, soybeans into soybean oil, canola
into canola oil, canola meal, or canola by-products, or sunflower seeds into sunflower
oil; as to such persons the amount of tax with respect to such business is equal to
the value of the flour, pearl barley, oil, canola meal, or canola by-product
manufactured, multiplied by the rate of 0.138 percent;
(b) Beginning July 1, 2025, seafood products that remain in a raw, raw frozen, or raw
salted state at the completion of the manufacturing by that person; or selling
manufactured seafood products that remain in a raw, raw frozen, or raw salted state at
the completion of the manufacturing, to purchasers who transport in the ordinary
course of business the goods out of this state; as to such persons the amount of tax
with respect to such business is equal to the value of the products manufactured or
the gross proceeds derived from such sales, multiplied by the rate of 0.138 percent.
Sellers must keep and preserve records for the period required by RCW 82.32.070
establishing that the goods were transported by the purchaser in the ordinary course
of business out of this state;
(c)(i) Except as provided otherwise in (c)(iii) of this subsection, from July 1,
2025, until January 1, 2036, dairy products; or selling dairy products that the person
has manufactured to purchasers who either transport in the ordinary course of business
the goods out of state or purchasers who use such dairy products as an ingredient or
component in the manufacturing of a dairy product; as to such persons the tax imposed
is equal to the value of the products manufactured or the gross proceeds derived from
such sales multiplied by the rate of 0.138 percent. Sellers must keep and preserve
records for the period required by RCW 82.32.070 establishing that the goods were
transported by the purchaser in the ordinary course of business out of this state or
sold to a manufacturer for use as an ingredient or component in the manufacturing of a
dairy product. (ii) For the purposes of this subsection (1)(c), "dairy products"
means: (A) Products, not including any marijuana-infused product, that as of September
20, 2001, are identified in 21 C.F.R., chapter 1, parts 131, 133, and 135, including
by-products from the manufacturing of the dairy products, such as whey and casein; and
(B) Products comprised of not less than seventy percent dairy products that qualify
under (c)(ii)(A) of this subsection, measured by weight or volume. (iii) The
preferential tax rate provided to taxpayers under this subsection (1)(c) does not
apply to sales of dairy products on or after July 1, 2023, where a dairy product is
used by the purchaser as an ingredient or component in the manufacturing in Washington
of a dairy product;
(d)(i) Beginning July 1, 2025, fruits or vegetables by canning, preserving, freezing,
processing, or dehydrating fresh fruits or vegetables, or selling at wholesale fruits
or vegetables manufactured by the seller by canning, preserving, freezing, processing,
or dehydrating fresh fruits or vegetables and sold to purchasers who transport in the
ordinary course of business the goods out of this state; as to such persons the amount
of tax with respect to such business is equal to the value of the products
manufactured or the gross proceeds derived from such sales multiplied by the rate of
0.138 percent. Sellers must keep and preserve records for the period required by RCW
82.32.070 establishing that the goods were transported by the purchaser in the
ordinary course of business out of this state. (ii) For purposes of this subsection
(1)(d), "fruits" and "vegetables" do not include marijuana, useable marijuana, or
marijuana-infused products;
(e) Until July 1, 2009, alcohol fuel, biodiesel fuel, or biodiesel feedstock, as
those terms are defined in RCW 82.29A.135; as to such persons the amount of tax with
respect to the business is equal to the value of alcohol fuel, biodiesel fuel, or
biodiesel feedstock manufactured, multiplied by the rate of 0.138 percent; and
(f) Wood biomass fuel as defined in RCW 82.29A.135; as to such persons the amount of
tax with respect to the business is equal to the value of wood biomass fuel
manufactured, multiplied by the rate of 0.138 percent.
(2) Upon every person engaging within this state in the business of splitting or
processing dried peas; as to such persons the amount of tax with respect to such
business is equal to the value of the peas split or processed, multiplied by the rate
of 0.138 percent.
(3) Upon every nonprofit corporation and nonprofit association engaging within this
state in research and development, as to such corporations and associations, the
amount of tax with respect to such activities is equal to the gross income derived
from such activities multiplied by the rate of 0.484 percent.
(4) Upon every person engaging within this state in the business of slaughtering,
breaking and/or processing perishable meat products and/or selling the same at
wholesale only and not at retail; as to such persons the tax imposed is equal to the
gross proceeds derived from such sales multiplied by the rate of 0.138 percent.
(5) Upon every person engaging within this state in the business of acting as a
travel agent or tour operator; as to such persons the amount of the tax with respect
to such activities is equal to the gross income derived from such activities
multiplied by the rate of 0.275 percent.
(6) Upon every person engaging within this state in business as an international
steamship agent, international customs house broker, international freight forwarder,
vessel and/or cargo charter broker in foreign commerce, and/or international air cargo
agent; as to such persons the amount of the tax with respect to only international
activities is equal to the gross income derived from such activities multiplied by the
rate of 0.275 percent.
(7) Upon every person engaging within this state in the business of stevedoring and
associated activities pertinent to the movement of goods and commodities in waterborne
interstate or foreign commerce; as to such persons the amount of tax with respect to
such business is equal to the gross proceeds derived from such activities multiplied
by the rate of 0.275 percent. Persons subject to taxation under this subsection are
exempt from payment of taxes imposed by chapter 82.16 RCW for that portion of their
business subject to taxation under this subsection. Stevedoring and associated
activities pertinent to the conduct of goods and commodities in waterborne interstate
or foreign commerce are defined as all activities of a labor, service or
transportation nature whereby cargo may be loaded or unloaded to or from vessels or
barges, passing over, onto or under a wharf, pier, or similar structure; cargo may be
moved to a warehouse or similar holding or storage yard or area to await further
movement in import or export or may move to a consolidation freight station and be
stuffed, unstuffed, containerized, separated or otherwise segregated or aggregated for
delivery or loaded on any mode of transportation for delivery to its consignee.
Specific activities included in this definition are: Wharfage, handling, loading,
unloading, moving of cargo to a convenient place of delivery to the consignee or a
convenient place for further movement to export mode; documentation services in
connection with the receipt, delivery, checking, care, custody and control of cargo
required in the transfer of cargo; imported automobile handling prior to delivery to
consignee; terminal stevedoring and incidental vessel services, including but not
limited to plugging and unplugging refrigerator service to containers, trailers, and
other refrigerated cargo receptacles, and securing ship hatch covers.
(8)(a) Upon every person engaging within this state in the business of disposing of
low-level waste, as defined in RCW 43.145.010; as to such persons the amount of the
tax with respect to such business is equal to the gross income of the business,
excluding any fees imposed under chapter 43.200 RCW, multiplied by the rate of 3.3
percent.
(b) If the gross income of the taxpayer is attributable to activities both within and
without this state, the gross income attributable to this state must be determined in
accordance with the methods of apportionment required under RCW 82.04.460.
(9) Upon every person engaging within this state as an insurance producer or title
insurance agent licensed under chapter 48.17 RCW or a surplus line broker licensed
under chapter 48.15 RCW; as to such persons, the amount of the tax with respect to
such licensed activities is equal to the gross income of such business multiplied by
the rate of 0.484 percent.
(10) Upon every person engaging within this state in business as a hospital, as
defined in chapter 70.41 RCW, that is operated as a nonprofit corporation or by the
state or any of its political subdivisions, as to such persons, the amount of tax with
respect to such activities is equal to the gross income of the business multiplied by
the rate of 0.75 percent through June 30, 1995, and 1.5 percent thereafter.
(11)(a) Beginning October 1, 2005, upon every person engaging within this state in
the business of manufacturing commercial airplanes, or components of such airplanes,
or making sales, at retail or wholesale, of commercial airplanes or components of
such airplanes, manufactured by the seller, as to such persons the amount of tax
with respect to such business is, in the case of manufacturers, equal to the value
of the product manufactured and the gross proceeds of sales of the product
manufactured, or in the case of processors for hire, equal to the gross income of
the business, multiplied by the rate of: (i) 0.4235 percent from October 1, 2005,
through June 30, 2007; and (ii) 0.2904 percent beginning July 1, 2007.
(b) Beginning July 1, 2008, upon every person who is not eligible to report under
the provisions of (a) of this subsection (11) and is engaging within this state in
the business of manufacturing tooling specifically designed for use in manufacturing
commercial airplanes or components of such airplanes, or making sales, at retail or
wholesale, of such tooling manufactured by the seller, as to such persons the amount
of tax with respect to such business is, in the case of manufacturers, equal to the
value of the product manufactured and the gross proceeds of sales of the product
manufactured, or in the case of processors for hire, be equal to the gross income of
the business, multiplied by the rate of 0.2904 percent.
(c) For the purposes of this subsection (11),
"commercial airplane" and "component" have the same meanings as provided in RCW
82.32.550.
(d) In addition to all other requirements
under this title, a person reporting under the tax rate provided in this subsection
(11) must file a complete annual tax performance report with the department under
RCW 82.32.534.
(e)(i) Except as provided in (e)(ii) of this
subsection (11), this subsection (11) does not apply on and after July 1, 2040. (ii)
With respect to the manufacturing of commercial airplanes or making sales, at retail
or wholesale, of commercial airplanes, this subsection (11) does not apply on and
after July 1st of the year in which the department makes a determination that any
final assembly or wing assembly of any version or variant of a commercial airplane
that is the basis of a siting of a significant commercial airplane manufacturing
program in the state under RCW 82.32.850 has been sited outside the state of
Washington. This subsection (11)(e)(ii) only applies to the manufacturing or sale of
commercial airplanes that are the basis of a siting of a significant commercial
airplane manufacturing program in the state under RCW 82.32.850.
(12)(a) Until July 1, 2024, upon every person engaging within this state in the
business of extracting timber or extracting for hire timber; as to such persons the
amount of tax with respect to the business is, in the case of extractors, equal to the
value of products, including by-products, extracted, or in the case of extractors for
hire, equal to the gross income of the business, multiplied by the rate of 0.4235
percent from July 1, 2006, through June 30, 2007, and 0.2904 percent from July 1,
2007, through June 30, 2024.
(b) Until July 1, 2024, upon every person engaging within this state in the business
of manufacturing or processing for hire: (i) Timber into timber products or wood
products; or (ii) timber products into other timber products or wood products; as to
such persons the amount of the tax with respect to the business is, in the case of
manufacturers, equal to the value of products, including by-products, manufactured, or
in the case of processors for hire, equal to the gross income of the business,
multiplied by the rate of 0.4235 percent from July 1, 2006, through June 30, 2007, and
0.2904 percent from July 1, 2007, through June 30, 2024.
(c) Until July 1, 2024, upon every person engaging within this state in the business
of selling at wholesale: (i) Timber extracted by that person; (ii) timber products
manufactured by that person from timber or other timber products; or (iii) wood
products manufactured by that person from timber or timber products; as to such
persons the amount of the tax with respect to the business is equal to the gross
proceeds of sales of the timber, timber products, or wood products multiplied by the
rate of 0.4235 percent from July 1, 2006, through June 30, 2007, and 0.2904 percent
from July 1, 2007, through June 30, 2024.
(d) Until July 1, 2024, upon every person engaging within this state in the business
of selling standing timber; as to such persons the amount of the tax with respect to
the business is equal to the gross income of the business multiplied by the rate of
0.2904 percent. For purposes of this subsection (12)(d), "selling standing timber"
means the sale of timber apart from the land, where the buyer is required to sever the
timber within thirty months from the date of the original contract, regardless of the
method of payment for the timber and whether title to the timber transfers before,
upon, or after severance.
(e) For purposes of this subsection, the following definitions apply: (i)
"Biocomposite surface products" means surface material products containing, by weight
or volume, more than fifty percent recycled paper and that also use nonpetroleum-based
phenolic resin as a bonding agent. (ii) "Paper and paper products" means products made
of interwoven cellulosic fibers held together largely by hydrogen bonding. "Paper and
paper products" includes newsprint; office, printing, fine, and pressure-sensitive
papers; paper napkins, towels, and toilet tissue; kraft bag, construction, and other
kraft industrial papers; paperboard, liquid packaging containers, containerboard,
corrugated, and solid-fiber containers including linerboard and corrugated medium; and
related types of cellulosic products containing primarily, by weight or volume,
cellulosic materials. "Paper and paper products" does not include books, newspapers,
magazines, periodicals, and other printed publications, advertising materials,
calendars, and similar types of printed materials. (iii) "Recycled paper" means paper
and paper products having fifty percent or more of their fiber content that comes from
postconsumer waste. For purposes of this subsection (12)(e)(iii), "postconsumer waste"
means a finished material that would normally be disposed of as solid waste, having
completed its life cycle as a consumer item. (iv) "Timber" means forest trees,
standing or down, on privately or publicly owned land. "Timber" does not include
Christmas trees that are cultivated by agricultural methods or short-rotation
hardwoods as defined in RCW 84.33.035. (v) "Timber products" means: (A) Logs, wood
chips, sawdust, wood waste, and similar products obtained wholly from the processing
of timber, short-rotation hardwoods as defined in RCW 84.33.035, or both; (B) Pulp,
including market pulp and pulp derived from recovered paper or paper products; and (C)
Recycled paper, but only when used in the manufacture of biocomposite surface
products. (vi) "Wood products" means paper and paper products; dimensional lumber;
engineered wood products such as particleboard, oriented strand board, medium density
fiberboard, and plywood; wood doors; wood windows; and biocomposite surface products.
(f) Except for small harvesters as defined in RCW 84.33.035, a person reporting under
the tax rate provided in this subsection (12) must file a complete annual tax
performance report with the department under RCW 82.32.534.
(13) Upon every person engaging within this state in inspecting, testing, labeling,
and storing canned salmon owned by another person, as to such persons, the amount of
tax with respect to such activities is equal to the gross income derived from such
activities multiplied by the rate of 0.484 percent.
(14)(a) Upon every person engaging within this state in the business of printing a
newspaper, publishing a newspaper, or both, the amount of tax on such business is
equal to the gross income of the business multiplied by the rate of 0.35 percent until
July 1, 2024, and 0.484 percent thereafter.
(b) A person reporting under the tax rate provided in this subsection (14) must file
a complete annual tax performance report with the department under RCW 82.32.534.
[ 2018 c 164 § 3; 2017 c 135 § 11. Prior: 2015 3rd sp.s. c 6 § 602; 2015 3rd sp.s. c
6 § 205; prior: 2014 c 140 § 6; (2014 c 140 § 5 expired July 1, 2015); 2014 c 140 § 4;
(2014 c 140 § 3 expired July 1, 2015); 2013 3rd sp.s. c 2 § 6; (2013 3rd sp.s. c 2 § 5
expired July 1, 2015); 2013 2nd sp.s. c 13 § 203; (2013 2nd sp.s. c 13 § 202 expired
July 1, 2015); prior: (2012 2nd sp.s. c 6 § 602 expired July 1, 2015); 2012 2nd sp.s.
c 6 § 204; 2011 c 2 § 203 (Initiative Measure No. 1107, approved November 2, 2010);
2010 1st sp.s. c 23 § 506; (2010 1st sp.s. c 23 § 505 expired June 10, 2010); 2010 c
114 § 107; prior: 2009 c 479 § 64; 2009 c 461 § 1; 2009 c 162 § 34; prior: 2008 c 296
§ 1; 2008 c 217 § 100; 2008 c 81 § 4; prior: 2007 c 54 § 6; 2007 c 48 § 2; prior: 2006
c 354 § 4; 2006 c 300 § 1; prior: 2005 c 513 § 2; 2005 c 443 § 4; prior: 2003 2nd
sp.s. c 1 § 4; 2003 2nd sp.s. c 1 § 3; 2003 c 339 § 11; 2003 c 261 § 11; 2001 2nd
sp.s. c 25 § 2; prior: 1998 c 312 § 5; 1998 c 311 § 2; prior: 1998 c 170 § 4; 1996 c
148 § 2; 1996 c 115 § 1; prior: 1995 2nd sp.s. c 12 § 1; 1995 2nd sp.s. c 6 § 1; 1993
sp.s. c 25 § 104; 1993 c 492 § 304; 1991 c 272 § 15; 1990 c 21 § 2; 1987 c 139 § 1;
prior: 1985 c 471 § 1; 1985 c 135 § 2; 1983 2nd ex.s. c 3 § 5; prior: 1983 1st ex.s. c
66 § 4; 1983 1st ex.s. c 55 § 4; 1982 2nd ex.s. c 13 § 1; 1982 c 10 § 16; prior: 1981
c 178 § 1; 1981 c 172 § 3; 1979 ex.s. c 196 § 2; 1975 1st ex.s. c 291 § 7; 1971 ex.s.
c 281 § 5; 1971 ex.s. c 186 § 3; 1969 ex.s. c 262 § 36; 1967 ex.s. c 149 § 10; 1965
ex.s. c 173 § 6; 1961 c 15 § 82.04.260; prior: 1959 c 211 § 2; 1955 c 389 § 46; prior:
1953 c 91 § 4; 1951 2nd ex.s. c 28 § 4; 1950 ex.s. c 5 § 1, part; 1949 c 228 § 1,
part; 1943 c 156 § 1, part; 1941 c 178 § 1, part; 1939 c 225 § 1, part; 1937 c 227 §
1, part; 1935 c 180 § 4, part; Rem. Supp. 1949 § 8370-4, part.]
SELECTED NOTES:
Contingent effective date—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See RCW 82.32.850.
Findings—Intent—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See note following RCW 82.32.850.
Findings—Savings—Effective date—2008 c 81: See notes following RCW 82.08.975.
Finding—2003 2nd sp.s. c 1: See note following RCW 82.04.4461.
Aerospace Product Development - Preferential Rate (B&O Tax)
RCW 82.04.290
Tax on international investment management services or other business or service
activities.
(1) Upon every person engaging within this state in the business of providing
international investment management services, as to such persons, the amount of tax
with respect to such business is equal to the gross income or gross proceeds of sales
of the business multiplied by a rate of 0.275 percent.
(2)(a) Upon every person engaging within this state in any business activity other
than or in addition to an activity taxed explicitly under another section in this
chapter or subsection (1) or (3) of this section; as to such persons the amount of tax
on account of such activities is equal to the gross income of the business multiplied
by the rate of 1.5 percent.
(b) This subsection (2) includes, among others, and without limiting the scope hereof
(whether or not title to materials used in the performance of such business passes to
another by accession, confusion or other than by outright sale), persons engaged in
the business of rendering any type of service which does not constitute a "sale at
retail" or a "sale at wholesale." The value of advertising, demonstration, and
promotional supplies and materials furnished to an agent by his or her principal or
supplier to be used for informational, educational, and promotional purposes is not
considered a part of the agent's remuneration or commission and is not subject to
taxation under this section.
(3)(a) Until July 1, 2040, upon every person engaging within this state in the
business of performing aerospace product development for others, as to such persons,
the amount of tax with respect to such business is equal to the gross income of the
business multiplied by a rate of 0.9 percent.
(b) A person reporting under the tax rate
provided in this subsection (3) must file a complete annual report with the
department under RCW 82.32.534.
(c) "Aerospace product development" has the
meaning as provided in RCW 82.04.4461.
[ 2014 c 97 § 404; (2014 c 97 § 403 expired July 9, 2014); 2013 3rd sp.s. c 2 § 8;
2013 c 23 § 314; 2011 c 174 § 101; 2008 c 81 § 6; 2005 c 369 § 8; 2004 c 174 § 2; 2003
c 343 § 2; 2001 1st sp.s. c 9 § 6; (2001 1st sp.s. c 9 § 4 expired July 1, 2001).
Prior: 1998 c 343 § 4; 1998 c 331 § 2; 1998 c 312 § 8; 1998 c 308 § 5; 1998 c 308 § 4;
1997 c 7 § 2; 1996 c 1 § 2; 1995 c 229 § 3; 1993 sp.s. c 25 § 203; 1985 c 32 § 3; 1983
2nd ex.s. c 3 § 2; 1983 c 9 § 2; 1983 c 3 § 212; 1971 ex.s. c 281 § 8; 1970 ex.s. c 65
§ 4; 1969 ex.s. c 262 § 39; 1967 ex.s. c 149 § 14; 1963 ex.s. c 28 § 2; 1961 c 15 §
82.04.290; prior: 1959 ex.s. c 5 § 5; 1955 c 389 § 49; prior: 1953 c 195 § 2; 1950
ex.s. c 5 § 1, part; 1949 c 228 § 1, part; 1943 c 156 § 1, part; 1941 c 178 § 1, part;
1939 c 225 § 1, part; 1937 c 227 § 1, part; 1935 c 180 § 4, part; Rem. Supp. 1949 §
8370-4, part.]
SELECTED NOTES:
Contingent expiration date—2014 c 97 §§ 401 and 403: See note following RCW 82.04.250.
Contingent effective date—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See RCW 82.32.850.
Findings—Intent—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See note following RCW 82.32.850.
Findings—Savings—Effective date—2008 c 81: See notes following RCW 82.08.975.
Aerospace Product Development Expenditures - Credit (B&O Tax)
RCW 82.04.4461
Credit—Preproduction development expenditures. (Effective January 1, 2018, until
July 1, 2040.)
(1)(a)(i) In computing the tax imposed under this chapter, a credit is allowed for
each person for qualified aerospace product development. For a person who is a
manufacturer or processor for hire of commercial airplanes or components of such
airplanes, credit may be earned for expenditures occurring after December 1, 2003. For
all other persons, credit may be earned only for expenditures occurring after June 30,
2008.(ii) For purposes of this subsection, "commercial airplane" and "component" have
the same meanings as provided in RCW 82.32.550.
(b) Before July 1, 2005, any credits earned under this section must be accrued and
carried forward and may not be used until July 1, 2005. These carryover credits may be
used at any time thereafter, and may be carried over until used. Refunds may not be
granted in the place of a credit.
(2) The credit is equal to the amount of qualified aerospace product development
expenditures of a person, multiplied by the rate of 1.5 percent.
(3) Except as provided in subsection (1)(b) of this section the credit must be
claimed against taxes due for the same calendar year in which the qualified aerospace
product development expenditures are incurred. Credit earned on or after July 1, 2005,
may not be carried over. The credit for each calendar year may not exceed the amount
of tax otherwise due under this chapter for the calendar year. Refunds may not be
granted in the place of a credit.
(4) Any person claiming the credit must file a form prescribed by the department that
must include the amount of the credit claimed, an estimate of the anticipated
aerospace product development expenditures during the calendar year for which the
credit is claimed, an estimate of the taxable amount during the calendar year for
which the credit is claimed, and such additional information as the department may
prescribe.
(5) The definitions in this subsection apply throughout this section.(a) "Aerospace
product" has the meaning given in RCW 82.08.975.(b) "Aerospace product development"
means research, design, and engineering activities performed in relation to the
development of an aerospace product or of a product line, model, or model derivative
of an aerospace product, including prototype development, testing, and certification.
The term includes the discovery of technological information, the translating of
technological information into new or improved products, processes, techniques,
formulas, or inventions, and the adaptation of existing products and models into new
products or new models, or derivatives of products or models. The term does not
include manufacturing activities or other production-oriented activities, however the
term does include tool design and engineering design for the manufacturing process.
The term does not include surveys and studies, social science and humanities research,
market research or testing, quality control, sale promotion and service, computer
software developed for internal use, and research in areas such as improved style,
taste, and seasonal design.(c) "Qualified aerospace product development" means
aerospace product development performed within this state.(d) "Qualified aerospace
product development expenditures" means operating expenses, including wages,
compensation of a proprietor or a partner in a partnership as determined by the
department, benefits, supplies, and computer expenses, directly incurred in qualified
aerospace product development by a person claiming the credit provided in this
section. The term does not include amounts paid to a person or to the state and any of
its departments and institutions, other than a public educational or research
institution to conduct qualified aerospace product development. The term does not
include capital costs and overhead, such as expenses for land, structures, or
depreciable property.(e) "Taxable amount" means the taxable amount subject to the tax
imposed in this chapter required to be reported on the person's tax returns during the
year in which the credit is claimed, less any taxable amount for which a credit is
allowed under RCW 82.04.440.
(6) In addition to all other requirements under this title, a person claiming the
credit under this section must file a complete annual tax performance report with the
department under RCW 82.32.534.
(7) Credit may not be claimed for expenditures for which a credit is claimed under
*RCW 82.04.4452.
(8) This section expires July 1, 2040.
[ 2017 c 135 § 15; 2013 3rd sp.s. c 2 § 9; 2010 c 114 § 115; 2008 c 81 § 7; 2007 c 54
§ 11; 2003 2nd sp.s. c 1 § 7.]
SELECTED NOTES:
Contingent effective date—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See RCW 82.32.850.
Findings—Intent—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See note following RCW 82.32.850.
Findings—Savings—Effective date—2008 c 81: See notes following RCW 82.08.975.
Finding—2003 2nd sp.s. c 1: "The legislature finds that the people of the
state have benefited from the presence of the aerospace industry in Washington state.
The aerospace industry provides good wages and benefits for the thousands of
engineers, mechanics, and support staff working directly in the industry throughout
the state. The suppliers and vendors that support the aerospace industry in turn
provide a range of jobs. The legislature declares that it is in the public interest to
encourage the continued presence of this industry through the provision of tax
incentives. The comprehensive tax incentives in this act address the cost of doing
business in Washington state compared to locations in other states." [ 2003 2nd sp.s.
c 1 § 1.]
Commercial Airplane Manufacturing - Credit for Taxes Paid (B&O Tax)
RCW 82.04.4463
Credit—Property and leasehold taxes paid on property used for manufacture of
commercial airplanes. (Effective January 1, 2018, until July 1, 2040.)
(1) In computing the tax imposed under this chapter, a credit is allowed for property
taxes and leasehold excise taxes paid during the calendar year.
(2) The credit is equal to:
(a)(i)(A) Property taxes paid on buildings, and land upon which the buildings are
located, constructed after December 1, 2003, and used exclusively in manufacturing
commercial airplanes or components of such airplanes; and (B) Leasehold excise taxes
paid with respect to buildings constructed after January 1, 2006, the land upon which
the buildings are located, or both, if the buildings are used exclusively in
manufacturing commercial airplanes or components of such airplanes; and(C) Property
taxes or leasehold excise taxes paid on, or with respect to, buildings constructed
after June 30, 2008, the land upon which the buildings are located, or both, and used
exclusively for aerospace product development, manufacturing tooling specifically
designed for use in manufacturing commercial airplanes or their components, or in
providing aerospace services, by persons not within the scope of (a)(i)(A) and (B) of
this subsection (2) and are taxable under RCW 82.04.290(3), 82.04.260(11)(b), or
82.04.250(3); or
(ii) Property taxes attributable to an increase in assessed value due to the
renovation or expansion, after: (A) December 1, 2003, of a building used exclusively
in manufacturing commercial airplanes or components of such airplanes; and (B) June
30, 2008, of buildings used exclusively for aerospace product development,
manufacturing tooling specifically designed for use in manufacturing commercial
airplanes or their components, or in providing aerospace services, by persons not
within the scope of (a)(ii)(A) of this subsection (2) and are taxable under RCW
82.04.290(3), 82.04.260(11)(b), or 82.04.250(3); and
(b) An amount equal to:
(i)(A) Property taxes paid, by persons taxable under RCW 82.04.260(11)(a), on
machinery and equipment exempt under RCW 82.08.02565 or 82.12.02565 and acquired after
December 1, 2003; (B) Property taxes paid, by persons taxable under RCW
82.04.260(11)(b), on machinery and equipment exempt under RCW 82.08.02565 or
82.12.02565 and acquired after June 30, 2008; or (C) Property taxes paid, by persons
taxable under RCW 82.04.250(3) or 82.04.290(3), on computer hardware, computer
peripherals, and software exempt under RCW 82.08.975 or 82.12.975 and acquired after
June 30, 2008.
(ii) For purposes of determining the amount eligible for credit under (i)(A) and (B)
of this subsection (2)(b), the amount of property taxes paid is multiplied by a
fraction. (A) The numerator of the fraction is the total taxable amount subject to the
tax imposed under RCW 82.04.260(11) (a) or (b) on the applicable business activities
of manufacturing commercial airplanes, components of such airplanes, or tooling
specifically designed for use in the manufacturing of commercial airplanes or
components of such airplanes. (B) The denominator of the fraction is the total taxable
amount subject to the tax imposed under all manufacturing classifications in chapter
82.04 RCW. (C) For purposes of both the numerator and denominator of the fraction, the
total taxable amount refers to the total taxable amount required to be reported on the
person's returns for the calendar year before the calendar year in which the credit
under this section is earned. The department may provide for an alternative method for
calculating the numerator in cases where the tax rate provided in RCW 82.04.260(11)
for manufacturing was not in effect during the full calendar year before the calendar
year in which the credit under this section is earned. (D) No credit is available
under (b)(i)(A) or (B) of this subsection (2) if either the numerator or the
denominator of the fraction is zero. If the fraction is greater than or equal to
nine-tenths, then the fraction is rounded to one. (E) As used in (b)(ii)(C) of this
subsection (2), "returns" means the tax returns for which the tax imposed under this
chapter is reported to the department.
(3) The definitions in this subsection apply throughout this section, unless the
context clearly indicates otherwise.(a) "Aerospace product development" has the same
meaning as provided in RCW 82.04.4461.(b) "Aerospace services" has the same meaning
given in RCW 82.08.975.(c) "Commercial airplane" and "component" have the same
meanings as provided in RCW 82.32.550.
(4) A credit earned during one calendar year may be carried over to be credited
against taxes incurred in a subsequent calendar year, but may not be carried over a
second year. No refunds may be granted for credits under this section.
(5) In addition to all other requirements under this title, a person claiming the
credit under this section must file a complete annual tax performance report with the
department under RCW 82.32.534.
(6) This section expires July 1, 2040.
[ 2017 c 135 § 16; 2013 3rd sp.s. c 2 § 10; 2010 1st sp.s. c 23 § 515; (2010 1st
sp.s. c 23 § 514 expired June 10, 2010); 2010 c 114 § 116; 2008 c 81 § 8; 2006 c 177 §
10; 2005 c 514 § 501; 2003 2nd sp.s. c 1 § 15.]
SELECTED NOTES:
Contingent effective date—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See RCW 82.32.850.
Findings—Intent—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See note following RCW 82.32.850.
Findings—Savings—Effective date—2008 c 81: See notes following RCW 82.08.975.
Finding—2003 2nd sp.s. c 1: See note following RCW 82.04.4461
Aerospace Product Development Computer Expenditures (Sales and Use Tax)
RCW 82.08.975
Exemptions—Computer parts and software related to the manufacture of commercial
airplanes. (Expires July 1, 2040.)
(1) The tax levied by RCW 82.08.020 does not apply to sales of computer hardware,
computer peripherals, or software, not otherwise eligible for exemption under RCW
82.08.02565, used primarily in the development, design, and engineering of aerospace
products or in providing aerospace services, or to sales of or charges made for labor
and services rendered in respect to installing the computer hardware, computer
peripherals, or software.
(2) The exemption is available only when the buyer provides the seller with an
exemption certificate in a form and manner prescribed by the department. The seller
must retain a copy of the certificate for the seller's files.
(3) The definitions in this subsection apply throughout this section unless the
context requires otherwise.
(a) "Aerospace products" means:(i) Commercial airplanes and their components;(ii)
Machinery and equipment that is designed and used primarily for the maintenance,
repair, overhaul, or refurbishing of commercial airplanes or their components by
federal aviation regulation part 145 certificated repair stations; and(iii) Tooling
specifically designed for use in manufacturing commercial airplanes or their
components.
(b) "Aerospace services" means the maintenance, repair, overhaul, or refurbishing of
commercial airplanes or their components, but only when such services are performed by
a FAR part 145 certificated repair station.
(c) "Commercial airplane" and "component" have the same meanings provided in RCW
82.32.550.
(d) "Peripherals" includes keyboards, monitors, mouse devices, and other accessories
that operate outside of the computer, excluding cables, conduit, wiring, and other
similar property.
(4) This section expires July 1, 2040.
[ 2013 3rd sp.s. c 2 § 11; 2008 c 81 § 2; 2003 2nd sp.s. c 1 § 9.]
SELECTED NOTES:
Contingent effective date—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See RCW 82.32.850.
Findings—Intent—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See note following RCW 82.32.850.
Findings—2008 c 81: "The legislature finds that the aerospace industry
provides good wages and benefits for the thousands of engineers, mechanics, support
staff, and other employees working directly in the industry throughout the state. The
legislature further finds that suppliers and vendors that support the aerospace
industry in turn provide a range of well-paying jobs. In 2003, and again in 2006, the
legislature determined it was in the public interest to encourage the continued
presence of this industry through the provision of tax incentives. However, the
legislature recognizes that key elements of Washington's aerospace industry cluster
were afforded few, if any, of the aerospace tax incentives enacted in 2003 and 2006.
The comprehensive tax incentives in this act are intended to more comprehensively
address the cost of doing business in Washington state compared to locations in other
states for a larger segment of the aerospace industry cluster." [ 2008 c 81 § 1.]
Finding—2003 2nd sp.s. c 1: See note following RCW 82.04.4461.
Commercial Airplane Production Facilities (Sales and Use Tax)
RCW 82.08.980
Exemptions—Labor, services, and personal property related to the manufacture of
commercial airplanes. (Effective January 1, 2018, until July 1, 2040.)
(1) The tax levied by RCW 82.08.020 does not apply to:
(a) Charges, for labor and services rendered in respect to the constructing of new
buildings, made to (i) a manufacturer engaged in the manufacturing of commercial
airplanes or the fuselages or wings of commercial airplanes or (ii) a port district,
political subdivision, or municipal corporation, to be leased to a manufacturer
engaged in the manufacturing of commercial airplanes or the fuselages or wings of
commercial airplanes;
(b) Sales of tangible personal property that will be incorporated as an ingredient or
component of such buildings during the course of the constructing; or
(c) Charges made for labor and services rendered in respect to installing, during the
course of constructing such buildings, building fixtures not otherwise eligible for
the exemption under RCW 82.08.02565(2)(b).
(2) The exemption is available only when the buyer provides the seller with an
exemption certificate in a form and manner prescribed by the department. The seller
must retain a copy of the certificate for the seller's files.
(3) No application is necessary for the tax exemption in this section. However, in
order to qualify under this section before starting construction, the port district,
political subdivision, or municipal corporation must have entered into an agreement
with the manufacturer to build such a facility. A person claiming the exemption under
this section is subject to all the requirements of chapter 82.32 RCW. In addition, the
person must file a complete annual tax performance report with the department under
RCW 82.32.534.
(4) The exemption in this section applies to buildings or parts of buildings,
including buildings or parts of buildings used for the storage of raw materials or
finished product, that are used primarily in the manufacturing of any one or more of
the following products:
(a) Commercial airplanes;
(b) Fuselages of commercial airplanes; or
(c) Wings of commercial airplanes.
(5) For the purposes of this section, "commercial airplane" has the meaning given in
RCW 82.32.550.
(6) This section expires July 1, 2040.
[ 2017 c 135 § 25; 2013 3rd sp.s. c 2 § 3; 2010 c 114 § 126; 2003 2nd sp.s. c 1 §
11.]
SELECTED NOTES:
Contingent effective date—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See RCW 82.32.850.
Findings—Intent—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See note following RCW 82.32.850.
Finding—2003 2nd sp.s. c 1: See note following RCW 82.04.4461.
Superefficient Airplane Production Facilities (Leasehold Excise Tax)
RCW 82.29A.137
Exemptions—Certain leasehold interests related to the manufacture of superefficient
airplanes. (Effective January 1, 2018, until July 1, 2040.)
(1) All leasehold interests in port district facilities exempt from tax under RCW
82.08.980 or 82.12.980 and used by a manufacturer engaged in the manufacturing of
superefficient airplanes, as defined in RCW 82.32.550, are exempt from tax under this
chapter. A person claiming the credit under RCW 82.04.4463 is not eligible for the
exemption under this section.
(2) In addition to all other requirements under this title, a person claiming the
exemption under this section must file a complete annual tax performance report with
the department under RCW 82.32.534.
(3) This section expires July 1, 2040.
[ 2017 c 135 § 35; 2013 3rd sp.s. c 2 § 13; 2010 c 114 § 134; 2003 2nd sp.s. c 1 §
13.]
SELECTED NOTES:
Contingent effective date—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See RCW 82.32.850.
Findings—Intent—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See note following RCW 82.32.850.
Finding—2003 2nd sp.s. c 1: See note following RCW 82.04.4461.
Superefficient Airplane Production Facilities (Property Tax)
RCW 84.36.655
Property related to the manufacture of superefficient airplanes. (Effective
January 1, 2018, until July 1, 2040.)
(1) Effective January 1, 2005, all buildings, machinery, equipment, and other
personal property of a lessee of a port district eligible under RCW 82.08.980 and
82.12.980, used exclusively in manufacturing superefficient airplanes, are exempt from
property taxation. A person taking the credit under RCW 82.04.4463 is not eligible for
the exemption under this section. For the purposes of this section, "superefficient
airplane" and "component" have the meanings given in RCW 82.32.550.
(2) In addition to all other requirements under this title, a person claiming the
exemption under this section must file a complete annual tax performance report with
the department under RCW 82.32.534.
(3) Claims for exemption authorized by this section must be filed with the county
assessor on forms prescribed by the department and furnished by the assessor. The
assessor must verify and approve claims as the assessor determines to be justified and
in accordance with this section. No claims may be filed after December 31, 2039. The
department may adopt rules, under the provisions of chapter 34.05 RCW, as necessary to
properly administer this section.
(4) This section applies to taxes levied for collection in 2006 and thereafter.(5)
This section expires July 1, 2040.
[ 2017 c 135 § 46; 2013 3rd sp.s. c 2 § 14; 2010 c 114 § 151; 2003 2nd sp.s. c 1 §
14.]
SELECTED NOTES:
Contingent effective date—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See RCW 82.32.850.
Findings—Intent—2013 3rd sp.s. c 2: See note following RCW 82.32.850.
Finding—2003 2nd sp.s. c 1: See note following RCW 82.04.4461.
Proposed Final Report | Aerospace Tax Preferences
December 2019
Review Details
Appendix A: Tax preference details
Nine tax preferences comprise the aerospace package subject to
this review
The nine tax preferences include preferential tax rates, credits, and exemptions, and
affect four tax programs, the Business and Occupation (B&O) Tax, the Sales and Use
Tax, the Property Tax, and the Leasehold Excise Tax. This appendix provides additional
detail about each preference's public policy objectives, statutory provisions, and the
estimated beneficiary savings.
The Legislature stated four public policy objectives
The Legislature initially created these tax preferences in 2003 with three stated
policy objectives:
To encourage the continued presence of the aerospace industry in Washington;
To reduce the cost of doing business in Washington for the aerospace industry
compared to locations in other states; and
To provide jobs with good wages and benefits.
When extending and expanding the preferences in 2013, the Legislature stated an
additional policy objective, to maintain and grow Washington's aerospace industry
workforce.
The preferences share common definitions
Statute defines a “commercial airplane” as an airplane certified by the Federal
Aviation Administration for transporting persons or property, and any military
derivative of a commercial airplane. Private airplanes, helicopters, and military
fighter aircraft do not qualify for the preferences.
Qualifying components must be federally certified for installation or assembly into a
commercial airplane.
The statute defines a “superefficient airplane” as a twin aisle airplane that uses
15% to 20% less fuel than similar airplanes on the market. The statute also includes
specifications that uniquely describe Boeing’s 787 line of commercial airplanes.
Statute defines “aerospace products” as:
Commercial airplanes and their components;
Machinery and equipment designed and used primarily for the maintenance, repair,
overhaul, or refurbishing of commercial airplanes or their components by federally
certified aviation repair stations; and
Tooling specifically designed for use in manufacturing commercial airplanes or
their components.
Generally, the preferences that apply to airplane manufacturers also apply to
“processors for hire.” A processor for hire is a business that manufactures
products from materials owned by another business.
The preferences share a common expiration date
The aerospace preferences are scheduled to expire on July 1, 2040.
Most of the preferences were enacted in the same legislation in 2003, contingent on
the location of a facility for assembling a superefficient airplane in Washington. On
December 19, 2003, governor Locke signed an agreement with The Boeing Company to build
the 787 airplane in Everett, which met the conditions for the preferences to become
effective. The certified aircraft repair firms preferential B&O tax rate was also
enacted in 2003, through different legislation.
In 2013, the Legislature extended the expiration dates for the preferences from July
1, 2024 to July 1, 2040 if a new commercial airplane manufacturing program was sited
in Washington by June 30, 2017. This contingency was satisfied when the Department of
Revenue certified that Boeing had selected Everett as the location of final assembly
of the 777X as well as the company's composite wing center.
The preferences share common accountability reporting
Beneficiaries of the aerospace tax preferences must file an annual tax performance
report with the Department of Revenue (DOR). The report requires information detailing
employment and wages for positions in Washington, and taxpayers may authorize DOR to
obtain this information directly from the Employment Security Department. Most
information contained in the annual tax performance report is subject to public
disclosure, including:
Employment and wage information for employment positions in Washington.
Total number of full-time, part-time, and temporary positions.
Amount of tax preference claimed.
The preferences are subject to recurring JLARC review
Statute requires that JLARC review the nine tax preferences every five years,
beginning in 2019.
Additional aerospace-related tax preferences reviewed in 2019
Three of the preferences provide reduced business and occupation (B&O) tax rates
for businesses that manufacture qualifying aerospace products and provide qualifying
aerospace services.
Manufacturers and processors for hire of commercial airplanes and their
components, and manufacturers of tooling specifically designed for use in
manufacturing aerospace products are taxed at the aerospace manufacturing B&O tax
rate of 0.2904%. When a manufacturer sells the product either at wholesale or retail
in-state, the manufacturer owes aerospace retailing or wholesaling B&O tax at the
same preferential rate of 0.2904%. A manufacturer subject to both the aerospace
manufacturing B&O tax and the aerospace retailing or wholesaling B&O tax is
allowed a Multiple Activities Tax Credit (MATC) against the aerospace retailing or
wholesaling B&O tax for the aerospace manufacturing B&O tax paid per RCW
82.04.440(2). In general, manufacturers and wholesalers, not provided a special
B&O tax rate, and retailers of tangible personal property used in interstate
transportation, pay B&O tax at the rate of 0.484%.
Aerospace Product
Development – Preferential B&O Tax Rate (RCW 82.04.290)
Non-manufacturers that research, design, or engineer aerospace products for
commercial airplanes for others to manufacture are taxed at 0.9%. Firms providing
research, design, and engineering services for others are generally taxed at the rate
of 1.5%.
Federally certified aviation repair stations are taxed at a preferential business
and occupation (B&O) tax rate of 0.2904% on sales of repair services and
component parts. Other interstate transportation equipment repair services are taxed
at the B&O rate of 0.484%.
Exhibit A4: Summary of aerospace preferential rates
Beneficiaries
Preferential Rate
General Classifications
General Rate
Manufacturing and Selling
Manufacturers or processors for hire of commercial airplanes and
components
0.2904%
Manufacturing, wholesaling, or retailing
0.484%
Manufacturers of tooling for use in manufacturing commercial airplanes and
components
0.2904%
Manufacturing, wholesaling, or retailing
0.484%
Retail sales of repair services and parts at federally certified aviation
repair stations
0.2904%
Other interstate transportation equipment repair services and parts
0.484%
Providing Services
Researchers, designers, and engineers of aerospace products
0.9%
Service and other
1.5%
Source: JLARC analysis of RCW.
B&O tax credits
Two preferences provide credits against a taxpayer's B&O tax liability. The
amount of each credit that may be claimed depends on the level of certain business
expenditures or taxes.
Aerospace Product
Development Expenditures – B&O Tax Credit (RCW 82.04.4461)
A B&O tax credit equal to 1.5% of qualifying expenditures for businesses
that develop aerospace products. Qualifying expenditures include wages and benefits,
supplies, and computer expenses, but not capital costs and overhead, such as expenses
for land, structures, or depreciable property. The credit must be taken in the year in
which the qualifying expenditures occur, except for credits earned before July 1,
2005, which can be carried over and used at a later date. If the amount of credit
exceeds tax liability, the credit cannot be carried over to reduce tax liability in
subsequent years, and cannot be refunded.
Provides a B&O tax credit for property taxes or leasehold excise taxes
paid on property used exclusively in manufacturing aerospace products, aerospace
product development, or in providing aerospace services at certified aviation repair
stations. The credit applies to new buildings, the land on which the buildings are
located, and on the increase in assessed value from renovations and expansions. The
credit is also available for property taxes paid on certain personal property.
To receive the B&O tax credit, buildings must be used exclusively in
manufacturing commercial airplanes or their components, or tooling specifically
designed for use in manufacturing. The credit may also be claimed for new buildings
and land, renovations, and expansion for facilities used for aerospace product
development and for maintenance, repair, overhaul, or refurbishing commercial
airplanes or their components by federally certified aviation repair stations.
The B&O tax credit provided to aerospace businesses applies to manufacturing
machinery and equipment, computer hardware, computer peripherals, and software if
these items are exempt from sales and use taxes. The B&O tax credit for
manufacturing machinery and equipment is calculated based on a firm’s aerospace
product income as a percentage of its total manufactured goods income.
The B&O tax credit cannot be claimed until the real and personal property taxes
have been paid. If the credit exceeds B&O tax owed, it may be carried forward one
year. Unused credits are not refundable.
Two preferences exempt certain purchases from sales and use tax.
Aerospace Product
Development Computer Expenditures – SUT Exemption (RCW 82.08.975)
A sales and use tax exemption for sales of computer hardware, computer
peripherals, and software used primarily in developing, designing, and
engineering aerospace products and providing aerospace services. Aerospace services
are defined in statute as maintenance, repair, overhaul, or refurbishing of commercial
airplanes or their components by federally certified repair stations. Sales of or
charges made for labor and services for installing the computer hardware, computer
peripherals, and software are also exempt.
Exhibit A7: Beneficiary Savings Estimate - Aerospace Product Development Computer
Expenditures - SUT Exemption
Biennium
Fiscal Year
Estimated Beneficiary Savings
2013-2015
7/1/2013 - 6/30/2015
2014
$3,110,000
2015
$3,080,000
2015-2017
7/1/2015 - 6/30/2017
2016
$3,100,000
2017
$4,920,000
2017-2019
7/1/2017 - 6/30/2019
2018
$4,500,000
2019
$4,500,000
2019-2021
7/1/2019 - 6/30/2021
2020
$4,500,000
2021
$4,500,000
2021-2023
7/1/2021 - 6/30/2023
2022
$4,500,000
2023
$4,500,000
2021-23 Biennium
$9,000,000
Source: JLARC analysis of DOR tax return data.
Commercial Airplane
Production Facilities – SUT Exemptions (RCW 82.08.980)
An exemption from sales and use taxes on labor, services, and materials
to construct newbuildings used for manufacturing commercial airplanes.
The exemption also includes labor and services for installation of fixtures during
construction of the new building. The exemption applies to either a manufacturer of
commercial airplanes, fuselages, or wings, or to a port district, political
subdivision, or municipal corporation leasing property to a manufacturer of those
products.
Exhibit A8: Beneficiary Savings Estimate - Commercial Airplane Production Facilities
- SUT Exemption
Biennium
Fiscal Year
Estimated Beneficiary Savings
2013-2015
7/1/2013 - 6/30/2015
2014
$19,590,000
2015
$51,700,000
2015-2017
7/1/2015 - 6/30/2017
2016
$22,820,000
2017
$6,800,000
2017-2019
7/1/2017 - 6/30/2019
2018
$6,800,000
2019
$6,800,000
2019-2021
7/1/2019 - 6/30/2021
2020
$6,800,000
2021
$6,800,000
2021-2023
7/1/2021 - 6/30/2023
2022
$6,800,000
2023
$6,800,000
2021-23 Biennium
$13,600,000
Source: JLARC analysis of DOR tax return data.
Property and Leasehold Excise Tax Exemptions
Two preferences would exempt certain superefficient airplane (Boeing 787)
manufacturing facilities from leasehold excise and property taxes if they were built
on port property. Boeing chose to build its 787 final assembly facility on private
property rather than property leased from a port. As such, no superefficient airplane
manufacturing takes place on port district property, and these preferences are not
currently being claimed.
Provides a leasehold excise tax exemption to the manufacturer of a
“superefficient airplane” (Boeing 787) for a facility located on port district
property.
This preference is not being claimed, and beneficiary savings are $0.
Superefficient
Airplane Production Facilities – Property Tax Exemption (RCW 84.36.655)
Provides a property tax exemption for all personal property such as equipment
and computers to the manufacturer of a “superefficient airplane” (Boeing 787) at a
facility located on port district property.
This preference is not being claimed, and beneficiary savings are $0.
Proposed Final Report | Aerospace Tax Preferences
December 2019
Review Details
Appendix A: Tax preference details
Nine tax preferences comprise the aerospace package subject to
this review
The nine tax preferences include preferential tax rates, credits, and exemptions, and
affect four tax programs, the Business and Occupation (B&O) Tax, the Sales and Use
Tax, the Property Tax, and the Leasehold Excise Tax. This appendix provides additional
detail about each preference's public policy objectives, statutory provisions, and the
estimated beneficiary savings.
The Legislature stated four public policy objectives
The Legislature initially created these tax preferences in 2003 with three stated
policy objectives:
To encourage the continued presence of the aerospace industry in Washington;
To reduce the cost of doing business in Washington for the aerospace industry
compared to locations in other states; and
To provide jobs with good wages and benefits.
When extending and expanding the preferences in 2013, the Legislature stated an
additional policy objective, to maintain and grow Washington's aerospace industry
workforce.
The preferences share common definitions
Statute defines a “commercial airplane” as an airplane certified by the Federal
Aviation Administration for transporting persons or property, and any military
derivative of a commercial airplane. Private airplanes, helicopters, and military
fighter aircraft do not qualify for the preferences.
Qualifying components must be federally certified for installation or assembly into a
commercial airplane.
The statute defines a “superefficient airplane” as a twin aisle airplane that uses
15% to 20% less fuel than similar airplanes on the market. The statute also includes
specifications that uniquely describe Boeing’s 787 line of commercial airplanes.
Statute defines “aerospace products” as:
Commercial airplanes and their components;
Machinery and equipment designed and used primarily for the maintenance, repair,
overhaul, or refurbishing of commercial airplanes or their components by federally
certified aviation repair stations; and
Tooling specifically designed for use in manufacturing commercial airplanes or
their components.
Generally, the preferences that apply to airplane manufacturers also apply to
“processors for hire.” A processor for hire is a business that manufactures
products from materials owned by another business.
The preferences share a common expiration date
The aerospace preferences are scheduled to expire on July 1, 2040.
Most of the preferences were enacted in the same legislation in 2003, contingent on
the location of a facility for assembling a superefficient airplane in Washington. On
December 19, 2003, governor Locke signed an agreement with The Boeing Company to build
the 787 airplane in Everett, which met the conditions for the preferences to become
effective. The certified aircraft repair firms preferential B&O tax rate was also
enacted in 2003, through different legislation.
In 2013, the Legislature extended the expiration dates for the preferences from July
1, 2024 to July 1, 2040 if a new commercial airplane manufacturing program was sited
in Washington by June 30, 2017. This contingency was satisfied when the Department of
Revenue certified that Boeing had selected Everett as the location of final assembly
of the 777X as well as the company's composite wing center.
The preferences share common accountability reporting
Beneficiaries of the aerospace tax preferences must file an annual tax performance
report with the Department of Revenue (DOR). The report requires information detailing
employment and wages for positions in Washington, and taxpayers may authorize DOR to
obtain this information directly from the Employment Security Department. Most
information contained in the annual tax performance report is subject to public
disclosure, including:
Employment and wage information for employment positions in Washington.
Total number of full-time, part-time, and temporary positions.
Amount of tax preference claimed.
The preferences are subject to recurring JLARC review
Statute requires that JLARC review the nine tax preferences every five years,
beginning in 2019.
Additional aerospace-related tax preferences reviewed in 2019
Three of the preferences provide reduced business and occupation (B&O) tax rates
for businesses that manufacture qualifying aerospace products and provide qualifying
aerospace services.
Manufacturers and processors for hire of commercial airplanes and their
components, and manufacturers of tooling specifically designed for use in
manufacturing aerospace products are taxed at the aerospace manufacturing B&O tax
rate of 0.2904%. When a manufacturer sells the product either at wholesale or retail
in-state, the manufacturer owes aerospace retailing or wholesaling B&O tax at the
same preferential rate of 0.2904%. A manufacturer subject to both the aerospace
manufacturing B&O tax and the aerospace retailing or wholesaling B&O tax is
allowed a Multiple Activities Tax Credit (MATC) against the aerospace retailing or
wholesaling B&O tax for the aerospace manufacturing B&O tax paid per RCW
82.04.440(2). In general, manufacturers and wholesalers, not provided a special
B&O tax rate, and retailers of tangible personal property used in interstate
transportation, pay B&O tax at the rate of 0.484%.
Aerospace Product
Development – Preferential B&O Tax Rate (RCW 82.04.290)
Non-manufacturers that research, design, or engineer aerospace products for
commercial airplanes for others to manufacture are taxed at 0.9%. Firms providing
research, design, and engineering services for others are generally taxed at the rate
of 1.5%.
Federally certified aviation repair stations are taxed at a preferential business
and occupation (B&O) tax rate of 0.2904% on sales of repair services and
component parts. Other interstate transportation equipment repair services are taxed
at the B&O rate of 0.484%.
Exhibit A4: Summary of aerospace preferential rates
Beneficiaries
Preferential Rate
General Classifications
General Rate
Manufacturing and Selling
Manufacturers or processors for hire of commercial airplanes and
components
0.2904%
Manufacturing, wholesaling, or retailing
0.484%
Manufacturers of tooling for use in manufacturing commercial airplanes and
components
0.2904%
Manufacturing, wholesaling, or retailing
0.484%
Retail sales of repair services and parts at federally certified aviation
repair stations
0.2904%
Other interstate transportation equipment repair services and parts
0.484%
Providing Services
Researchers, designers, and engineers of aerospace products
0.9%
Service and other
1.5%
Source: JLARC analysis of RCW.
B&O tax credits
Two preferences provide credits against a taxpayer's B&O tax liability. The
amount of each credit that may be claimed depends on the level of certain business
expenditures or taxes.
Aerospace Product
Development Expenditures – B&O Tax Credit (RCW 82.04.4461)
A B&O tax credit equal to 1.5% of qualifying expenditures for businesses
that develop aerospace products. Qualifying expenditures include wages and benefits,
supplies, and computer expenses, but not capital costs and overhead, such as expenses
for land, structures, or depreciable property. The credit must be taken in the year in
which the qualifying expenditures occur, except for credits earned before July 1,
2005, which can be carried over and used at a later date. If the amount of credit
exceeds tax liability, the credit cannot be carried over to reduce tax liability in
subsequent years, and cannot be refunded.
Provides a B&O tax credit for property taxes or leasehold excise taxes
paid on property used exclusively in manufacturing aerospace products, aerospace
product development, or in providing aerospace services at certified aviation repair
stations. The credit applies to new buildings, the land on which the buildings are
located, and on the increase in assessed value from renovations and expansions. The
credit is also available for property taxes paid on certain personal property.
To receive the B&O tax credit, buildings must be used exclusively in
manufacturing commercial airplanes or their components, or tooling specifically
designed for use in manufacturing. The credit may also be claimed for new buildings
and land, renovations, and expansion for facilities used for aerospace product
development and for maintenance, repair, overhaul, or refurbishing commercial
airplanes or their components by federally certified aviation repair stations.
The B&O tax credit provided to aerospace businesses applies to manufacturing
machinery and equipment, computer hardware, computer peripherals, and software if
these items are exempt from sales and use taxes. The B&O tax credit for
manufacturing machinery and equipment is calculated based on a firm’s aerospace
product income as a percentage of its total manufactured goods income.
The B&O tax credit cannot be claimed until the real and personal property taxes
have been paid. If the credit exceeds B&O tax owed, it may be carried forward one
year. Unused credits are not refundable.
Two preferences exempt certain purchases from sales and use tax.
Aerospace Product
Development Computer Expenditures – SUT Exemption (RCW 82.08.975)
A sales and use tax exemption for sales of computer hardware, computer
peripherals, and software used primarily in developing, designing, and
engineering aerospace products and providing aerospace services. Aerospace services
are defined in statute as maintenance, repair, overhaul, or refurbishing of commercial
airplanes or their components by federally certified repair stations. Sales of or
charges made for labor and services for installing the computer hardware, computer
peripherals, and software are also exempt.
Exhibit A7: Beneficiary Savings Estimate - Aerospace Product Development Computer
Expenditures - SUT Exemption
Biennium
Fiscal Year
Estimated Beneficiary Savings
2013-2015
7/1/2013 - 6/30/2015
2014
$3,110,000
2015
$3,080,000
2015-2017
7/1/2015 - 6/30/2017
2016
$3,100,000
2017
$4,920,000
2017-2019
7/1/2017 - 6/30/2019
2018
$4,500,000
2019
$4,500,000
2019-2021
7/1/2019 - 6/30/2021
2020
$4,500,000
2021
$4,500,000
2021-2023
7/1/2021 - 6/30/2023
2022
$4,500,000
2023
$4,500,000
2021-23 Biennium
$9,000,000
Source: JLARC analysis of DOR tax return data.
Commercial Airplane
Production Facilities – SUT Exemptions (RCW 82.08.980)
An exemption from sales and use taxes on labor, services, and materials
to construct newbuildings used for manufacturing commercial airplanes.
The exemption also includes labor and services for installation of fixtures during
construction of the new building. The exemption applies to either a manufacturer of
commercial airplanes, fuselages, or wings, or to a port district, political
subdivision, or municipal corporation leasing property to a manufacturer of those
products.
Exhibit A8: Beneficiary Savings Estimate - Commercial Airplane Production Facilities
- SUT Exemption
Biennium
Fiscal Year
Estimated Beneficiary Savings
2013-2015
7/1/2013 - 6/30/2015
2014
$19,590,000
2015
$51,700,000
2015-2017
7/1/2015 - 6/30/2017
2016
$22,820,000
2017
$6,800,000
2017-2019
7/1/2017 - 6/30/2019
2018
$6,800,000
2019
$6,800,000
2019-2021
7/1/2019 - 6/30/2021
2020
$6,800,000
2021
$6,800,000
2021-2023
7/1/2021 - 6/30/2023
2022
$6,800,000
2023
$6,800,000
2021-23 Biennium
$13,600,000
Source: JLARC analysis of DOR tax return data.
Property and Leasehold Excise Tax Exemptions
Two preferences would exempt certain superefficient airplane (Boeing 787)
manufacturing facilities from leasehold excise and property taxes if they were built
on port property. Boeing chose to build its 787 final assembly facility on private
property rather than property leased from a port. As such, no superefficient airplane
manufacturing takes place on port district property, and these preferences are not
currently being claimed.
Provides a leasehold excise tax exemption to the manufacturer of a
“superefficient airplane” (Boeing 787) for a facility located on port district
property.
This preference is not being claimed, and beneficiary savings are $0.
Superefficient
Airplane Production Facilities – Property Tax Exemption (RCW 84.36.655)
Provides a property tax exemption for all personal property such as equipment
and computers to the manufacturer of a “superefficient airplane” (Boeing 787) at a
facility located on port district property.
This preference is not being claimed, and beneficiary savings are $0.
Proposed Final Report | Aerospace Tax Preferences
December 2019
Review Details
Appendix B: Ernst & Young tax competitiveness report
Ernst & Young estimated relative business tax competitiveness
for aerospace manufacturing firms
JLARC staff contracted with Ernst & Young to perform business tax
competitiveness analysis
Ernst & Young (EY) analyzed the state and local tax climate for aerospace
manufacturing firms in Washington and a set of 13 benchmark states. The other states
were selected based on their high relative concentration of aerospace employment or
their high ranking in the Teal Group's Aerospace Competitive
Economics StudyCommissioned by the Choose Washington
New-Mid Market Airplane (NMA) council, the report addresses the competitive
business environment that aerospace manufacturing companies face considering
locating in the 50 U.S. states or the District of Columbia.. The
study estimated the tax burdens that would be faced by a representative small (50
employees) and large (10,000 employees) aerospace firm making investments in new
facilities in Washington and these benchmark states:
Arizona
Alabama
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Georgia
Kansas
Missouri
North Carolina
Ohio
South Carolina
Texas
Utah
Details of the Analysis
To perform the analysis, EY used a discounted cash flow model programmed with the
financial features of the aerospace products and parts manufacturing industry (NAICS
3364) and the relevant tax features and rates in each state. The financial profiles
estimate metrics such as employment, wages, business assets, income and expenses based
on public data and EY calculations.
EY analyzed the systems in each of the benchmark states and coded them into its
model. The model estimates the tax burdens resulting from corporate income tax, sales
tax on business inputs, property tax, franchise tax, and gross receipts taxes such as
the Washington B&O tax and Ohio Commercial Activities Tax. The burden of these
taxes was combined to estimate the effective tax rate (ETR), expressed as the
percentage change in the hypothetical business' rate of return due to taxes.
Next, EY analyzed the availability of statutory and negotiated tax incentives and
evaluated their impact on the aerospace business' ETR in each state. The analysis
included the following categories of statutory tax incentives, available to all
businesses that meet statutory eligibility requirements:
Tax credits due to job creation.
Tax credits due to investment.
Wage rebates.
Preferential tax rates.
Tax credits due to research and experimentation (R&E) expenditures.
Sales and use tax exemptions on capital investments.
The analysis also included a review of discretionary or negotiated incentives that
may be available to the representative businesses. This portion of the review relies
on the experience and knowledge of EY professionals and the typical incentive size for
similar projects. Because of their discretionary nature, there is no formal source for
the level of benefits and the impact of such potentially available incentives would
not be verifiable public information.
The results are presented as a comparison of the states' effective tax rates for a
small and a large representative business at three stages: before any tax incentives,
after statutory tax incentives, and after statutory and negotiated incentives. Both
the states' ETR and their relative rankings are reported for the small and the large
firm.
Exhibit B1: Pre- and post-incentive effective tax rates for small firms
Exhibit B2: Pre- and post-incentive effective tax rates for large firms
Full Ernst & Young Report Available
Click here for the full EY report,
which provides additional detail about the methodology, data sources, and results of
the analysis.
Proposed Final Report | Aerospace Tax Preferences
December 2019
Review Details
Appendix C: REMI overview
What is REMI?
JLARC staff used Regional Economic Models, Inc.'s (REMI) Tax-PI software (version
2.2) to model the economic impacts for several tax preference reviews in 2019,
including the aerospace tax preferences.
REMI software is used by approximately 30 state governments and dozens of private
sector consulting firms, research universities, and international clients.
Model is tailored to Washington and includes government sector
Tax-PI is an economic impact tool used to evaluate the fiscal and economic effects
and the demographic impacts of a tax policy change. The software includes various
features that make it particularly useful for analyzing the economic and fiscal
impacts of tax preferences:
REMI staff consulted with staff from the Office of Financial Management (OFM) and
customized a statewide model to reflect Washington's economy.
The model contains 160 industry sectors, based on the North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS) codes.
In contrast to other modeling software, Tax-PI includes state and local government
as a sector. This permits users to see the trade-offs associated with tax policy
changes (e.g., effects on Washington's economy from both increased expenditures by
businesses due to a tax preference, along with decreased spending by government due
to the associated revenue loss).
For current revenue and expenditure data, users can input information to reflect
their state's economic and fiscal situation. This allows JLARC staff to calibrate a
state budget using up-to-date information from the Economic and Revenue Forecast
Council (ERFC) and the Legislative Evaluation and Accountability Program
(LEAP).
The model can forecast economic and revenue impacts multiple years into the
future.
Model simulates the full impact of a tax policy change
The REMI model accounts for the direct, indirect, and induced effects as they spread
through the state's economy, which allows users to simulate the full impact of a tax
policy change over time.
Direct effects are industry specific and capture how a target industry responds to
a particular policy change (e.g., changes in industry employment following a change
in tax policy).
Indirect effects capture employment and spending decisions by businesses in the
targeted industry's supply chain that provide goods and services.
Induced effects capture the in-state spending and consumption habits of employees
in targeted and related industries.
The REMI model produces year-by-year estimates of the total statewide effects of a
tax policy change. Impacts are measured as the difference between a baseline economic
and revenue forecast and the estimated economic and revenue effects after the policy
change.
Model includes economic, demographic, and fiscal variables
The REMI model is a macroeconomic impact model that incorporates aspects of four
major economic modeling approaches: input-output, general equilibrium, econometric,
and new economic geography. The foundation of the model, the inter-industry matrices
found in the input-output models, captures Washington's industry structure and the
transactions between industries. Layered on top of this structure is a complex set of
mathematical equations used to estimate how private industry, consumers, and state and
local governments respond to a policy change over time.
The supply side of the model includes many economic variables representing labor
supply, consumer prices, and capital and energy costs with elasticities for both the
consumer and business sectors.
Regional competitiveness is modeled via imports, exports, and output.
Demographics are modeled using population dynamics (births, deaths, and economic
and retirement migration) and includes cohorts for age, sex, race, and retirement.
Demographic information informs the model's estimates for economic consumption and
labor supply.
The dynamic aspect comes from the ability to adjust variables over time as
forecasted economic conditions change.
While the model is complex and forecasting involves some degree of uncertainty,
Tax-PI provides a tool for practitioners to simulate how tax policy and the resulting
industry changes affect Washington's economy, population, and fiscal situation.
Proposed Final Report | Aerospace Tax Preferences
December 2019
Report Details
Appendix D: REMI analysis
REMI analysis illustrates range of potential employment impacts
of not extending aerospace tax preferences in 2013
JLARC staff used REMI's Tax-PI to model three scenarios that illustrate potential
employment impacts of not extending the aerospace tax preferences in 2013.
This technical appendix provides background detail and supporting information for the
JLARC staff analysis that led to the results summarized in Tab
4.
This appendix is divided into three sections:
REMI methodology details how JLARC staff set up and calibrated the Tax-PI
program prior to using the model to analyze possible impacts.
Beneficiary industries discusses baseline aerospace manufacturing
employment in the REMI model of the Washington economy, and identifies the other
industry classifications of beneficiaries that have used the preferences.
Scenarios modeled describes the scenarios used to estimate the range of
potential employment effects of the aerospace tax preferences on statewide
employment.
REMI Methodology
User inputs in REMI
REMI's Tax-PI model allows users to model policy changes and analyze the estimated
impacts to the Washington economy, both in terms of economic activity and government
finances (see Appendix C for an overview of the REMI model).
Prior to running modeling scenarios, users must make a series of choices about how to
set up the modeling environment by building a state budget and calibrating the model
accordingly. JLARC staff used the November 2018 revenue estimates produced by the
Economic and Revenue Forecast Council (ERFC) and budgeted expenditures for fiscal
years 2016 through 2018, as reported by the Legislative Evaluation and Accountability
Program (LEAP) Committee. This data represents the budget and revenue data in the
model and serves as the "jump off" point for Tax-PI's economic and fiscal estimates.
In addition to establishing a budget and inputting expected revenue values, users
must specify whether government expenditures are determined by demand or by revenue.
"By demand" imposes a level of government spending in future years that is
necessary to maintain the same level of service as the final year in which budget
data is entered.
"By revenue" ties government expenditures to estimated changes in revenue
collections.
JLARC staff ran the scenarios with expenditures set to be determined by
demand. By setting expenditures to be determined by demand, users avoid making
assumptions about how policymakers may alter spending priorities in the future. In
addition, users essentially establish the current budget allocation as carry-forward
levels for each expenditure category.
Users also may elect to impose a balanced budget restriction (also known as the
balanced budget feedback loop) or leave the model unconstrained. The balanced budget
restriction forces revenue and expenditures to be equivalent and thus may impose some
limitations on economic activity. JLARC staff ran the reported scenarios with the
balanced budget restriction turned on.
Because Tax-PI is a forecasting tool, JLARC staff was unable to model the economic
impact of the tax preferences beginning in 2013. Rather, JLARC staff modeled the
potential impacts if the preferences had not been extended beginning in 2017.
Data for the REMI model
The REMI model comes with historical economic and demographic data back to 2001. The
data comes from federal government agencies such as the U.S. Census Bureau, U.S.
Energy Information Administration, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and the Bureau of
Economic Analysis. As described above, current revenue and expenditure data for
Washington comes from ERFC and LEAP, respectively. The data to build the modeling
scenarios described in Tab 4 is from various sources.
Equivalent changes in production cost and government spending for scenarios in
this report are based on JLARC staff estimates of beneficiary savings, developed
from Department of Revenue tax records.
JLARC staff estimates of potential employment changes in response to the tax
preferences are based on documentation from OFM and Community
AttributesCommunity Attributes is a consulting firm
commissioned in 2003 by the Washington Aerospace Partnership to examine the
economic and fiscal impacts of the aerospace industry on Washington.
, media coverage of employment at Boeing's composite wing facility,
and discussions with an advisory panel concerning potential impacts of the tax
preferences. JLARC staff thanks the members of this panel for their participation:
Timothy Bartik, W. E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research; Kriss Sjoblom,
Washington Research Council; Greg Weeks, independent consulting economist; Stan
Sorsher, Society of Professional Engineering Employees in Aerospace; Toby Paterson,
Office of Financial Management; Jeff Robinson, Employment Security Department; Anna
Yamada, Department of Revenue; Jeff Mitchell, Senate Committee Services; and Tracey
O'Brien, House of Representatives Office of Program Research.
Capital expenditure changes are based on media coverage of the cost to build the
Boeing composite wing center and on public disclosure of tax savings associated with
commercial airplane manufacturing facilities. They are entered into the model as an
increase in nonresidential investment spending.
Aerospace tax preference beneficiary industries in REMI
The majority of tax savings attributable to the aerospace tax preferences are claimed
by businesses in the aerospace product and part manufacturing industry that report
under the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) code 3364. However,
businesses from many other industry classifications report claiming at least one of
the aerospace tax preferences. JLARC staff entered production cost reductions into the
model for the industries that report savings in the amount of tax savings they
claimed. Because the public policy objectives of the tax preferences are directed
toward the aerospace industry specifically, employment effects are reported at the
NAICS 3364 level as well as at the other private industry and government levels.
Aerospace product and part manufacturing industry jobs fluctuated in Washington
between 2001 and 2017
REMI's historical baseline and forecast employment data for the aerospace product and
part manufacturing industry fluctuated from a low of 59,300 in 2004 to a high of
96,000 in 2013. Before simulating other policy changes, employment is projected to
decline steadily from 92,300 in 2017 to 76,300 by 2040. Aerospace employment effects
in the REMI model results are expressed as changes against this baseline.
Exhibit D1: REMI baseline and forecast data shows aerospace manufacturing jobs
decline after 2013
Source: JLARC staff analysis of REMI baseline employment data for aerospace product
and part manufacturing industry (NAICS code 3364).
Beneficiaries of the tax preferences report in 50 different industries included in
REMI model
Data reported to the Department of Revenue shows the businesses that claimed the
preferences between fiscal years 2015 and 2017 reported under 50 different industry
classifications, listed below.
Exhibit D2: Aerospace tax preference beneficiary businesses report under many
industry classifications
REMI NAICS
Industry Description
23
Construction
313, 314
Textile mills and textile product mills
3219
Other wood product manufacturing
3222
Converted paper product manufacturing
3252
Resin, synthetic rubber, and artificial synthetic
fibers and filaments manufacturing
3259
Other chemical product and preparation
manufacturing
3261
Plastics product manufacturing
3311
Iron and steel mills and ferroalloy manufacturing
3312
Steel product manufacturing from purchased steel
3313
Alumina and aluminum production and processing
3314
Nonferrous metal (except aluminum) production and
processing
3315
Foundries
3321
Forging and stamping
3322
Cutlery and handtool manufacturing
3323
Architectural and structural metals manufacturing
3325
Hardware manufacturing
3326
Spring and wire product manufacturing
3327
Machine shops; turned product; and screw, nut, and
bolt manufacturing
3328
Coating, engraving, heat treating, and allied
activities
3329
Other fabricated metal product manufacturing
3333
Commercial and service industry machinery
manufacturing, including digital camera manufacturing
3335
Metalworking machinery manufacturing
3336
Engine, turbine, and power transmission equipment
manufacturing
3339
Other general purpose machinery manufacturing
3341
Computer and peripheral equipment manufacturing,
excluding digital camera manufacturing
3344
Semiconductor and other electronic component
manufacturing
3345
Navigational, measuring, electromedical, and control
instruments manufacturing
3353
Electrical equipment manufacturing
3359
Other electrical equipment and component
manufacturing
3363
Motor vehicle parts manufacturing
3364
Aerospace product and parts manufacturing
3371
Household and institutional furniture and kitchen
cabinet manufacturing
3399
Other miscellaneous manufacturing
42
Wholesale trade
44-45
Retail trade
481
Air transportation
487, 488
Scenic and sightseeing transportation and support
activities for transportation
5413
Architectural, engineering, and related services
5414
Specialized design services
5415
Computer systems design and related services
5416
Management, scientific, and technical consulting
services
5417
Scientific research and development services
5419
Other professional, scientific, and technical
services
5611, 5612
Office administrative services; Facilities support
services
5613
Employment services
5614, 5616, 5619
Business support services; Investigation and security
services; Other support services
61
Educational services; private
8112
Electronic and precision equipment repair and
maintenance
8113
Commercial and industrial machinery and equipment
(except automotive and electronic) repair and maintenance
8114
Personal and household goods repair and
maintenance
Source: JLARC staff analysis of DOR tax return data, REMI industry detail.
Scenarios modeled to estimate the employment impact of the aerospace tax preferences
JLARC staff are unable to determine how Boeing would have responded if the tax
preferences had not been extended in 2013. To illustrate the range of possible
responses and their employment effects, JLARC staff modeled three scenarios:
Scenario 1: Boeing locates 777X production out of state; Boeing employees
currently working on the 777 line – estimated by Community Attributes at 12,100
employees – are phased out over a five year period as 777X production ramps up and
the older model is discontinued. This scenario assumes that Boeing's decision to
move the 777X out of state would have had no bearing on location decisions for
future aircraft lines.
Scenario 2: Boeing builds the 777X elsewhere as well as other new
generations of airplanes, resulting in an 80% decrease in Boeing employment in
Washington over a 15 year period. This scenario was considered by the Office of
Financial Management (OFM) in its analysis for the 2003 aerospace tax preferences,
and it was included in JLARC's 2014 report on the preferences.
Scenario 3: Boeing locates 777X production in Washington despite the
preferences not being expanded and extended. This scenario assumes that the
preferences had no influence on Boeing's location decision. This scenario includes
only the effects of the expiration of the preferences through a change in production
costs and government spending.
For each scenario modeled, JLARC staff modeled a change in nominal state government
spending in the amount of estimated beneficiary savings for FY 2025-2040. The amounts
were also entered as production cost increases among beneficiary industry
classifications, distributed in proportion to the savings claimed by businesses in
each industry. These amounts are shown below. Importantly, these policy variables take
effect in 2025, the year after the aerospace tax preferences were originally scheduled
to expire. This supports the assumption that production cost and government spending
would increase after this expiration. The beneficiary savings estimates for Scenarios
1 and 2 in Exhibit D3 were reduced in proportion to the reduction in aerospace
industry output caused by each respective scenario's employment reductions.
Exhibit D3: Estimated beneficiary savings entered into REMI model
Fiscal Year
Estimated Beneficiary Savings (millions of dollars)
2025
$312.9
2026
$322.8
2027
$333.9
2028
$345.5
2029
$357.2
2030
$369.4
2031
$382.2
2032
$396.0
2033
$410.7
2034
$426.4
2035
$443.3
2036
$461.5
2037
$480.4
2038
$500.0
2039
$520.4
2040
$541.5
Source: JLARC staff analysis of DOR tax return data.
In addition to the policy variables that estimate the opportunity cost of the use of
beneficiary savings, the three scenarios included other policy variables to
approximate potential responses to non-extension of the tax preferences.
Scenario 1: Boeing locates 777X production and the composite wing facility outside
Washington. Boeing's decision to move the 777X out of state has no bearing on location
decisions for future aircraft lines.
Assumption 1: JLARC staff assumed aerospace industry employment fell by 12,100
jobs over a 5-year period. In JLARC staff's analysis, this phase-out began in 2017.
The employment changes are applied at the industry (international exports) level. The
values of this policy variable are shown below:
Exhibit D4: Scenario 1 employment changes entered into REMI model
Year
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021+
Employment Change - Aerospace (jobs)
-2,420
-4,840
-7,260
-9,680
-12,100
Source: JLARC staff analysis of Boeing, OFM data.
Assumption 2: The Washington economy loses the net effects of the construction
of Boeing's $1 billion composite wing facility. This is entered into the model as a
decrease in nonresidential investment spending and a decrease in aerospace employment.
Modeling the loss of this investment, the scenario considers the effects of the
following policy variables:
Exhibit D5: Scenario 1 capital spending changes entered into REMI model
Year
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021+
Investment Spending - Nonresidential ($ millions)
-$250
-$500
-$250
Employment Change - Aerospace (jobs)
-250
-500
-500
Source: JLARC staff analysis of DOR tax return data, public information.
Scenario 2: Boeing locates 777X production and subsequent generations of airplanes
outside Washington.
Assumption 1: JLARC staff assumed aerospace industry employment fell by 80% of
Boeing's average 2016 employment (75,864 jobs) over a 15-year period. In JLARC staff's
analysis, this phase-out began in 2017. The employment changes are applied at the
industry (international exports) level. The values of this policy variable are shown
below:
Exhibit D6: Scenario 2 employment changes entered into REMI model
Year
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
2031+
Employment Change - Aerospace (thousands of jobs)
-4.0
-8.1
-12.1
-16.1
-20.2
-24.2
-28.3
-32.3
-36.3
-40.4
-44.4
-48.4
-52.5
-56.5
-60.5
Source: JLARC staff analysis of Boeing, OFM data.
Assumption 2: The Washington economy loses the net effects of the construction
of Boeing's $1 billion composite wing facility. This is entered into the model as a
decrease in nonresidential investment spending and a decrease in aerospace employment.
Modeling the loss of this investment, the scenario considers the effects of the
following policy variables:
Exhibit D7: Scenario 2 capital spending changes entered into REMI model
Year
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021+
Investment Spending - Nonresidential ($ millions)
-$250
-$500
-$250
Employment Change - Aerospace (jobs)
-250
-500
-500
Source: JLARC staff analysis of DOR tax return data, public information.
Scenario 3: Boeing sites 777X production in Washington despite the preferences not
being expanded and extended.
The third scenario assumes the preferences had no influence on Boeing's location
decision. There are no changes to aerospace employment or capital spending, as the
non-extension of the tax preferences is not assumed to have had an effect on either
Boeing's location decision, nor its decision to construct the composite wing facility.
However, the scenario does assume the construction of the composite wing facility
would have been subject to sales and use tax, increasing the aerospace production cost
in the first three years of the simulation. The main effects on employment in this
scenario result from the change in nominal state government spending and production
cost in the amount of estimated beneficiary savings for FY 2025-2040.
Exhibit D8: Scenario 3 assumes sales and use tax paid on composite wing facility
construction
Year
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021+
Production Cost - Aerospace Product and Part Manufacturing ($ millions)
$25
$50
$25
Source: JLARC staff analysis of DOR tax return data, public information.
Two Employment Data Sources
Different approaches in reporting employment
The employment and wage numbers used in the main report are from administrative data
collected and maintained by the Washington Employment Security Department (ESD) and
reported to the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). This data
captures workers covered by state unemployment insurance and federal workers covered
by unemployment compensation for federal employees. It omits some workers in the labor
market, including self-employed and sole proprietors.
The REMI model, on the other hand, uses employment data from the U.S. Department of
Commerce's Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). BEA makes a number of adjustments to
employment and wage data for occupations not covered by the BLS system (see BEA's Frequently Asked
Questions for further details).
Understanding the distinction between BEA and BLS employment data is important for
two reasons:
The BEA jobs numbers tend to be higher, as they capture a wider selection of
employment, including sole proprietors. However, it may count a person holding
multiple jobs as a number greater than one, whereas the BLS data counts a person one
time regardless of the number of jobs performed.
While BEA provides a more comprehensive picture, it has an approximate two-year
lag behind BLS data, which is regularly updated throughout the year and receives
more attention in the press. According to REMI, BEA employment data operates as a
unit of demand related to the tasks a worker performs within a job, rather than a
job itself.
The Legislative Auditor recommends clarifying
legislative expectations for the level of aerospace industry
employment
The Legislature should clarify its expectations for the level of aerospace
industry employment. Providing additional detail in the tax preference
performance statement such as a baseline level of employment would facilitate future
reviews of these preferences.
There is evidence that the public policy objectives for these preferences are being
achieved. However, JLARC staff cannot determine whether there is a causal relationship
between the preferences and the continued presence of the aerospace industry or the
quality of aerospace jobs.
Further, JLARC staff cannot determine whether the preferences meet the public policy
objective to maintain and grow Washington’s aerospace industry workforce. Washington
aerospace employment is lower than it was in 2013, but higher than when the
preferences were first enacted in 2003. The preferences may have prevented greater job
losses if they caused a major Boeing location decision.
Consistent with the Legislative Auditor's recommendation in 2014, the Legislature
could facilitate future reviews by providing additional detail within the tax
preference performance statement for these preferences. This additional detail would
be consistent with the Legislative Auditor’s January 2014 guidance for drafting performance statements
in tax preference legislation. This additional detail would include:
Identification of the tax preference logic chain and a specific employment
baseline or target level the Legislature wants JLARC staff to use in future
evaluations, such as a specific industry job numbers or a percentage increase from a
specific point in time.
Direction to JLARC staff whether to evaluate the preferences’ effectiveness
based on achieving targets or determining causality.
It is much more likely that an evaluation will have a conclusive answer to whether a
target was achieved than an answer to whether there was a causal relationship
between a tax preference and a target.
The Commission endorses the Legislative Auditor's recommendation with comment. The
tax preference continues to meet the majority of stated objectives. However, the
employment objectives are ambiguous. The commission recommends the Legislature clarify
its position on employment levels.
Regardless of how the Legislature clarifies this issue, the Legislature must be very
cautious in how it interprets and responds to employment changes as a factor in the
preference’s efficacy. The industry, like manufacturing in general, are rapid adopters
of new technology that enhances productivity. This has the potential to significantly
lower the labor input over time. Also, business cycle events, which are outside the
industry’s control, may lead to significant declines in employment that can persist
for several years. In addition, the Legislative Auditor’s research and aerospace
industry testimony shows that the industry provides above-average investment spending,
wages and benefits, and workforce training. None of these areas can be captured by an
analysis of changes in employment.
Given the above, employment changes by themselves are insufficient for evaluating the
preference’s efficacy. Therefore, the commission recommends that the Legislature
continues to evaluate the preference on a regular cycle using a range of objectives,
with employment levels being only one of the considerations. The current JLARC
process, based on multiple objectives, provides the most transparent and valid method
for determining the degree to which the majority of objectives are met and whether or
not the Legislature needs to adjust the preference.