California Balks At Internet Sales Tax 268
bob_calder writes "California has walked away from $2 billion a year in revenue by declining to get on board with a group working to standardize tax rates so a national tax on Internet sales could eventually be implemented by Congress. Supporters of the tax think they still have a chance in New York, Texas, and Florida. At the moment the largest states pursuing the Streamlined Sales Tax Initiative are New Jersey, Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio. California didn't want to give up its autonomy in setting taxes to a coalition of smaller states."
Who is the "orginization" behind this tax? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Who is the "orginization" behind this tax? (Score:5, Insightful)
The second problem is that if states 1 to 47 have sales tax and 1-3 do not, then a lot of business is going to gravitate to those last three states.
Of course, if they tax them to be the same as brick and mortar, then folks will just shift back away from the internet.
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Re:Who is the "orginization" behind this tax? (Score:4, Informative)
Something I actually know about!
My Dad is working on Streamlined Sales Tax Committee
It's an initiative that's being run by the states, but
the big push is from big online realators like Amazon and
E-bay because they don't want to face 50 sets of rules of
tax for all of the 50 states.
The current system is stupid on the face of it, since now
most states only tax commerce for corperations which have
a actual physical presence in that state, it encourages
companies to not setup any investment in states where they
do a high volume of sales.
It's been going on for *years* and I don't know that they're
making much progress, too many cooks.
should there be a sale tax on online purchases? (Score:2)
The current system is stupid on the face of it, since now most states only tax commerce for corperations which have a actual physical presence in that state, it encourages companies to not setup any investment in states where they do a high volume of sales.
Are you saying it is stupid that online stores don't have to collect sales tax? If so why should they have to to collect and pay state's sales tax? As far as I'm concerned there sholdn't be any sales tax on online purchases. If what is purchased is
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What I'm saying is that the states are activly discouraging investment from companies, because that might force those companies' customer's to pay state sales tax. (E.g. there was talk back when Amazon never charged any sales tax except CA that if they built a new data center in state X, that residents of X would have to start paying tax on their Amazon purchases, which discouraged Amazon from brining that investment in)
1) All tax is a money grab by the states
2) Everyone wants lower taxes, but the curre
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The current proposal is a huge burden on small businesses. The biggest problems with the current proposal are:
Each participating state wants me to remit the collected sales tax to them separately. Why can't I send in one payment to my state and then they can make
It's called Use Tax (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It's called Use Tax (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:It's called Use Tax (Score:5, Insightful)
I think the biggest challenge to a standardized nation wide sales tax is states with ZERO sales tax. So what are you going to do in these anti-tax states? Force them to implement a tax? Is it going to be a compromise mid-level, or is it going to be on the high-end like California?
I looked at my own internet purchases last year, and a number were from companies that already collect local sales tax since they have a business presence in my state, and the tax on everything else is a few hundred dollars at best. My state requires that I itemize everything for the use tax collection, which is just nuts. I put down zero as I have done every year for the past 25 years.
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Re:It's called Use Tax (Score:4, Interesting)
To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes;
The States don't have the power to tax interstate commerce, that is a power specifically allocated to Congress by the Constitution... that's why they try to skirt the issue by demanding "Use Taxes" and the only time you need to pay sales tax is when a company has a brick and mortar presence in that state.
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What I don't understand is why vendors aren't required to charge sales tax on out-of-state sales, collect the money, and then give it to the state in question.
Why should venders be required to tax out of state purchases?
FalconRe: (Score:3, Insightful)
My favorite internet tax quote: (Score:5, Insightful)
"While there is no evidence that Main Street firms have lost business due to tax differentials, that is beside the point. The answer to these concerns should not be to raise taxes on the Internet, but to lower taxes on Main Street businesses."
Colorado Governor Bill Owens
In a letter to Congress urging the extension of the Internet tax moratorium, and opposing his fellow governors' plea for Congressional approval to force collection of sales and use taxes from remote businesses.
August 20, 2001
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The only ones losing out on that would be companies that work on tax returns (like H&R Block)
sigh.. i really really wish...
So you want to tax the baby boomers twice? (Score:5, Insightful)
Federal sales taxes have a number of problems.
The biggest, IMHO, is that switching to them ends up taxing people's savings - especially retirement savings - twice. It was taxed once, at various rates, while it was was being squirreled away. Then it gets taxed again, at confiscatory rates, when it is spent.
Right now is especially nasty, since you've got the entire baby boom just reaching retirement age. They've already been massively soaked by the Social Security pyramid scheme to give bread and circuses to previous generations - amid constant predictions that it would collapse when THEY retired. So they had to build their own retirement nest-eggs on top of it, while paying the ever-climbing interest on the national debt (which first became intractable when their parents ran the Vietnam War on credit, back when the bulk of the boomers were opposing it). Now, as they're about to retire and have to live on what little they were able to save: And people talk about "replacing" the income tax (which they already paid on much of that money) with a similar percentage of sales tax.
That's one big voting block that will oppose such a measure until they die - by which time additional generations will be in a similar situation.
Next: Like all taxes, once imposed it will never go away and will always go up. Sales taxes, being largely hidden, make it much easier for the government to jack the rates. (See the "value added tax" debacle on the other side of the Atlantic pond for details.)
And: Sales taxes zap the lower income earners harder than the upper (since the lower-income people are working hand-to-mouth and need to spend pretty much all of it, while the upper can avoid spending much of it - investing it to make more, moving it to places and situations where the tax can be avoided before spending it, etc.). This scheme attempts to avoid the effect by "rebating" a certain amount of tax to each individual - approximating a flat-tax plus dole scheme. What a massive opportunity for cheating (by creating multiple fake identities to get multiple "rebates".) What a massive excuse for the government to impose a national ID / registration / citizen tracking system.
I could go on...
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That's true, and it's definitely an issue. But some of the double taxation already exists today; when I buy something with my after-tax income, a significant chunk of the payment goes to corporate taxes and other taxes embedded in the purchase price, which would be eliminated under the FairTax. And if I invest the money instead of immediately spending it I end up paying capital gains taxes, w
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The point is not whether you'd need any additional ID number.
With the current SSN, while it's not legal to register more than once, there's little incentive to do so, because benefits are largely proportional to pay-in. Somebody who switches identities loses his accumulation in return for anon
Getting same effect with less downsides (Score:3, Insightful)
- Stick with an income tax but make it DEAD flat. Collect the full amount as withholding at paycheck time. Everybody pays the same percentage, so there's no need to track I.D.
- Do the flat "rebate/dole" as a separate (though related) item: One to a customer, regardless of income. Registration is voluntary, as is picking up the payment. Anybody who wishes
Federal sales taxes have a number of problems. (Score:2)
The biggest, IMHO, is that switching to them ends up taxing people's savings - especially retirement savings - twice. It was taxed once, at various rates, while it was was being squirreled away. Then it gets taxed again, at confiscatory rates, when it is spent.
Sales tax does not tax savings, it only taxes spending. When it is spent it changes from savings to spending money. Actually income tax should be abolished and replaced with a national sales tax.
Right now is especially nasty, since you've got th
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Mostly because it's impossible to find the latest gadgets locally, even if you live in a major city in the U.S.
And even then, it's not the sales tax that drives people away, it's the fact that the stores that have cutting edge gadgets are often boutique sellers that charge a significant premium over "regular" retailers.
For example, it's pretty difficult for most people to buy an Apple computer locally (defined as 45 minutes away or less), or BluRay recorder for your PC
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No, it isn't. It's classic Grover Norquist anti-tax, anti-government rhetoric packaged up in populist clothing. We levy taxes for a very important reason: they fund the services necessary for us to maintain our society and prosper.
It's not insightful to blather on about government inefficiency. You've got to show where it can be improved. More often than not, government programs are running on barebones budgets. There's no fat to cut.
I'm sick of right-wingers fanning the flames of fear and isolatio
I thought us Aussies were taxed weird (Score:4, Interesting)
"The state also requires its residents to report purchases made over the Internet and pay taxes on them"
How can they enforce that? Our tax laws are pretty uniform across the country, but I buy something from overseas, I don't have to pay our local GST (Goods & Services Tax) of 10% on the item. I may or may not have to pay the import tax to get it through customs, depending on what it is and how it is sent over.
I see buying something over the internet as the same as actually traveling to the state / country where the item is and buying it. As long as the seller obeys local tax laws, who cares what the buyer does?
I may have an overy simplistic view of things though.
- paul
http://www.paulpichugin.com.au/ [paulpichugin.com.au]
Re:I thought us Aussies were taxed weird (Score:5, Insightful)
Perhaps, but I think it more likely that our elected leaders have an overly complex view of things.
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Perhaps, but I think it more likely that our elected leaders have an overly complex view of things.
You're both wrong. I think our elected leaders have an overly greedy view of things.
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Ever been audited? It sucks. They will comb through your credit card statements looking for online purchases. Paypal account? If they suspect malfeasance, don't be surprised if those records are made available to the state -- just like b&m banks are subpoenad to provide records in the case of suspected income tax evasion.
All they need to do for enforcement is make sure that (probability of begin audited * average perceived punishment for audited people) is greater than t
Sales Tax vs. Use Tax (Score:2)
Actually, it is.
No matter where an item is purchased, the purchaser owes a "use tax" payment to the state in which the item is first used. If "sales tax" has been paid on the item, the amount paid in "sales tax" is deducted from "use tax" payment which is due. When you buy an item in your state of residence, the "sales tax" and "use tax" amounts are equal, so while it was collecte
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In Australia you just pay sales tax on something when you buy it, but you don't get taxed for using it. I can go to Melbourne and buy a car or a piece of furniture or whatever and bring it back here to Brisbane and not have to worry about any extra taxes on the product.
I'd hate to have to keep track of everything I bought interstate, I
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well, they can't very well. That is why the other states want an easier way. Currently to do the US there would be thousands* of tax codes and rates
*thousands assumed but there are around 250 for Washington
Washington is even better, they do it the same way except there is NO personal income tax thus no form, thus probably less than the 00.0001% someone else made up
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Purchases from a mail order catalog are treated the same way by the law.
a better idea (Score:2)
Fair Tax (Score:3, Interesting)
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Yes, I suppose the extremely wealthy have dreams of pushing even more of the tax burden upon the poorest and middle classes, so I _guess_ calling it a "dream" is a fair characterization.
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True fair tax formula. (Score:3, Interesting)
Anything else is unfair, but necessary simply because not everyone can afford their fair share.
All the shenanigans of modern tax code boils down to the politics of extracting unfair amounts of money from whomever will pay.
Re:True fair tax formula. (Score:5, Insightful)
Taxes are the same way. Not everybody uses government services the same. Many government services (like having a military) are not directly used by the majority of people. Everything needs to be funded* somehow, and charging the people who both use less and make less an amount which is more than their annual salary is not fair by any means. What is the most fair tax plan, then? It doesn't exist! But a system that charges more money to the people who can afford it or who use more government services is a lot more fair than charging a homeless man more money than he has spent in the last decade while charging Bill Gates less than he makes in 5 minutes from bank interest.
*let's not debate whether the budget is just or not.
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More than just the autonomy. (Score:4, Interesting)
California wants to be a State now? (Score:4, Insightful)
In the last story, California wanted to be a bland featureless part of the Federation letting someone else manage the citizen identification issues. Now in this story, California wants to retain full sovereignty over taxation. I know there's more than one person, and therefore more than one opinion on the whole statehood thing here, but come on, fellas.
REPEAL PROP13! (Score:2, Informative)
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Otherwise they kick the door down to your house, arrest you, seize your assets, and throw you on the street.
That is all.
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Your question presumes that the property tax in general is a good idea. I tend to think that taxing the primary property of residence is not a wise policy. However, taxing two houses in the same neighborhood at ridiculously different rates is a worse policy. Likewise, when dealing with skyrocketing housing costs, giving home owners a strong disi
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I'll certainly buy into that argument for GDP. I'll heartily thank the generations that came before me for my high standard of living. I don't think that they're to thank for the housing bubble, or that a housing bubble is really something to be thankful for. It's more of an unhealthy
Different rationale (Score:2)
> California didn't want to give up its autonomy in setting taxes to a coalition of smaller states.
Let's restate that. CA didn't want to give up it's opportunity to score some political points. Autonomy and tax bashing sell extremely well in politics. Voters pay much less attention to issue like the efficiency of a harmonized tax system.
If this is done on a state by state basis it will be an inefficient mess with many more ways to get around paying. The result will be much less revenue for the states
The real reason this won't work (Score:3, Insightful)
If California did not accept it... (Score:2)
As in Beer (Score:3, Insightful)
Those of us on the eastern side of Vermont already drive to New Hampshire to buy other stuff that's taxed at home. Now, since this new law to protect the taxability of future internet beer sales, we're getting our beer there too. Smart move, legislature.
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Federal yes- Oregon takes great pains to make sure our income tax is extremely progressive. It's the main complaint of business people in this state.
No, Income Tax is "Progressive." (Score:2)
Having said that: The "FairTax" proposal would be a good idea.
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Well, I make above average, and I paid about 8% in federal income tax for 2006. Add in all the taxes I pay (including the portions of all companies I own parts of through stock and such, as well as "taxes" I pay that I will get back in old age) and I'm still well below 20%. And yes
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How so? That doesn't make any sense to me at all. Sales tax is the great equalizer. The more you spend, the more you pay in tax. Sales tax also encourages people to save and invest. I think you have your logic backwards.
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Savings and investment are things only the rich can afford to do- a tax shelter in a state that lives on sales tax would be getting Howard Hughes Syndrome- living very poor off of your investments. Likewise, in a state like mine that is already cash poor, you don't WANT people to save. Y
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I think you meant to say that "Savings and investment are things that everyone except the very poor can afford to do." Hell, even freakin Walmart has a 401K plan. It all depends on whether you decide to spend all your cash and buy all the coolest toys, or whether you live frugally and put money away. I sure don't consider myself rich, and I have been saving since high-school, and minimum wage jobs. I just save a heck of a lot more now.
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401k plans are not investment. 401k plans are the federal government using a tax loophole to funnel money from the poor into brokerage acounts, at which point it gets eaten up between "stock market downturns" and "brokerage fees", with the total zeroing out every 5-10 years. REAL investing doesn't use the con game known as a stock market; inste
Clueless much? (Score:2)
However, your understanding of the VC market is illusionary. The real rate of r
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I suppose this could be true- but I find living in a cardboard box usually means that employment soon ends. If you were truly *not rich* then you'd be spending all of your money on food, clothing, shelter, water, heat, electricity, and enough tools of the trade to get hired. By defi
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The number one thing that creates production, is having somebody to buy your production. In other words, spending. Destroy your customers, and you destroy any hope of having a business OR wealth above minimum wage.
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In absolute terms, you're right. In relative terms, there's a big difference. A person making millions of dollars typically spends a much smaller fraction of their income than a middle-income wage earner. As a result, the average person pays sales tax (7.75% in my locality) on a much la
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Unfortuneately it already happened. I used to live in a town that had logging trucks roll through every day- but the sawmill was based on old-growth sized trees (most were really 80 year old 2nd growth), and spotted owls killed it.
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There are at least a few good reasons to have a progressive income tax instead of a consumption tax, but you have not offered a single one.
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Doesn't work that way because they hide behind fake persons called Corporations, and Corporations don't have to pay local taxes. Likewise, the corporations can afford to save, unlike regular people.
There are at least a few good reasons to have a progressive income tax instead of a consumption tax, but you have not offered a single one.
Ok, here's one: taxes as a percent
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Even if this weren't the case, how would wealthy people hide their income behind a corporation? Any "realized" gains in stocks (i.e., proceeds from sale or dividends) are subjec
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NINE times we have voted on a sales tax. 9 times it has been voted out... and they STILL keep proposing it.. When will the wastrels we call Gu'bmint figure it out? WE know your game and we want NO PART OF IT HERE!
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I think they're hoping for the day that foreigners and Californicators outnumber 'Gonies like you and me.
I am also in Oregon and Mister, I don't care if your oposition to the sales tax is due to alien communications or your pet ferret thinks its a bad idea as long as you oposes it!
Six more li
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Funny... it's the exact same thing with income tax in WA state. We keep voting it out; legislators keep putting it on the table. (For those not familiar: Oregon and Washington state legislatures are both fairly liberal and love their taxes. OR has a state income tax but no sales tax. WA has the
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Makes about the same amount of sense.
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Lower.
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Tax avoidance is always a worthy goal, and sales tax is one of the least fair taxes there is for the simple reason that it is a flat tax levied against what are the necessities of life for many people with low incomes.
There are so many large problems with the current hodge-podge of taxes as implemented in this country that I believe that it is an affront to morality.
- Cigarette taxes - rather than treating tobacco as the giant public health problem it is and
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Sales tax is just another way to transfer wealth from the poor to the rich. It is always a scam based on a will for the rich to avoid any responsibility for their greater consumption of natural resources that they would otherwise be paying for. I recommend always avoiding it whenever possible.
Great speech, comrade. Read that in Pravda, did you?
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I HACK Marx, I'm not a communist. Marx wasn't a communist either, strickly speaking. Das Capital and the Manifesto are the same document written from different perspectives. Right now I'm more of a distributist- I prefer small economic communites (of no more than 6000 people at the most, prefer
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So like North Korea, but with no economy of scale. Let me know how that works out.
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A slightly less violent form has worked out for the past 1600 years: Catholic contemplative communities. Many are self-sufficient now, especially since the teachings on environmentalism came along.
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If the retailers were expected to charge the local sales tax rates for where the buyer is located, this would require an large amount of data, as states and counties can set their own tax rates. This is especially problematic as the retailers would need to make sure this data stays up to date. It also adds an extra burden to the retailer to submit the monies and forms back to said localities.
This will undoubtedly cause the cost of buying things on the Inter
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Re:why standardize tax rates? (Score:5, Informative)
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A small operation could have file 300 different tax reports a month and write 300 checks for 10 cents too ten do