Internet Sales Tax Vote This Week In US Senate 434
SonicSpike excerpts from CNet's coverage of the latest in the seemingly inevitable path toward consistently applied Internet sales taxes for U.S citizens: "Internet tax supporters are hoping that a vote in the U.S. Senate as early as today will finally give them enough political leverage to require Americans to pay sales taxes when shopping online. Sens. Mike Enzi (R-Wy.) and Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) are expected to offer an amendment to a Democratic budget resolution this week that, by allowing states to 'collect taxes on remote sales,' is intended to usher in the first national Internet sales tax." There goes one of the best ways to vote with your dollars.
NOOOOOOO (Score:5, Funny)
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If it can be taxed, it will be taxed. That's just how humans do things.
Unless they are rich, of course, in which case they have a large list of ways to avoid paying taxes.
Re:NOOOOOOO (Score:5, Insightful)
To be fair... (Score:5, Insightful)
The 'no sales tax' scenario is generally enticement to commit tax fraud.
Usually, a 'no sales tax' purchase has an obligation to pay a 'use tax' equal to the amount the sales tax would have been. People saving money due to sales tax are almost always committing tax fraud.
So this isn't levelling by force, it's correcting a 'loophole'. In my mind, abolish use tax, if you *must* enact sales tax to do that, oh well, it's easier than sales tax to keep track of.
Re:To be fair... (Score:5, Insightful)
This whole thing still shows even Congress doesn't grasp the basic laws at work.
Sales Tax is almost always owed by the PURCHASER. That's why all the stores in my state have a LICENSE to COLLECT that tax and sent it on your behalf to the State. So if I buy something via mail order in Michigan from a business only in Iowa THAT BUSINESS has no obligation to MICHIGAN to collect anything. I still have the obligation to PAY MICHIGAN its USE TAX because I LIVE in that state.
That's the only issue, that a state cannot tell people in OTHER STATES to follow its laws. Not to mention, complying with ONE state tax where your physical store is located is hard... Why should an online business have to collect for 50 states?
Why don't states force BUSINESSES to pay the Sales Tax on what they sell? Because taxing sales BETWEEN THE STATES is illegal for any state to do. It's illegal for Ohio to force a business shipping into Ohio to pay ANY tax to do so. It's illegal for Michigan to COLLECT any tax from Michigan business on an item sold to Ohio. That keeps states from starting trade wars with each other.
So either the FEDS need to enact a federal clearinghouse that allows Internet businesses to only file one form per customer, or they need to compel the BANKS and other financial services located IN EACH STATE to collect taxes based on their accounts mailing address. That's the closest to "constitutional" because you receive and pay your Visa at a bank licensed to your state, and you receive the bill at your postal mailing address. So each statement would only have to account for ONE sales tax per customer.
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Hmm...
Since I started collecting credit cards, I've lived in eight (or perhaps nine) States. Which credit cards are associated with any particular bank, I have no clue at all. And could care less.
In addition, my spouse and such of the children as are old enough h
Re:To be fair... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:To be fair... (Score:5, Informative)
Use tax is arguably unconstitutional due to the interstate commerce clause, and that is why states do not enforce it. They can wield the moral force of "this is the law" to those that don't know better and get them to put it on their tax returns, but they won't go after those who don't pay because they're afraid to lose. The states' end game has been a federal authorization for the states to collect sales tax because it would put them on much more solid legal ground.
You've clearly never been through a sales/use tax audit as a business.
They do not feel like it's unconstitutional, and are not afraid to enforce it. it's not a "moral force" - it actually is the law. You cannot get out of state entities to collect sales taxes for you, but if they can show that you have nexus in a state, they can make you collect them. If you buy things from anywhere, in or out of state, as a purchaser you must pay use tax on it. It's not a suggestion for the ignorant - it is the law that you report your untaxed purchases.
Technically you owe this on everything, even those things that have been taxed by other states - it's just that most states agree to reciprocity.
There is very little gray area here. As an individual they probably won't go after you, but businesses that are supposed to collect sales tax (including those without a physical presence) and pay use tax - they go after you like wolves.
A universal rule for everyone would be a dream for those that process sales taxes. It's ridiculous the amount of time that is spent figuring out which sales are taxable, what jurisdiction those are in (the state, county, city, LOST, misc taxes) and how to report and pay those.
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Use tax is arguably unconstitutional due to the interstate commerce clause, and that is why states do not enforce it. They can wield the moral force of "this is the law" to those that don't know better and get them to put it on their tax returns, but they won't go after those who don't pay because they're afraid to lose. The states' end game has been a federal authorization for the states to collect sales tax because it would put them on much more solid legal ground.
The use tax on the residents within a state by that state is perfectly constitutional according to the Commerce clause because it places the burden of payment equally on everyone in the receiving state. The sales tax charged by one state to a seller in another state is unconstitutional (according to the Commerce clause) because it places the burden on the seller in the other state.
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And they didn't bring the server to me, I reached out to it. The goods were not where I live before I bought them, so the purchase happened where the company was, just like if I go over the state line to buy a pack of gum and some fireworks. I have no idea why such a simple thing eluded you.
You keep saying duh, but I'm starting to hear a braying ass.
Re:NOOOOOOO (Score:5, Insightful)
The bottom 50% of earners only receive 10%-15% of ALL THE MONEY in the posted GDP each year. They literally have nothing to tax.. And social security is STILL a higher percentage tax than the majority of businesses pay.
Re:NOOOOOOO (Score:5, Insightful)
Also relevant to this discussion: The median wage in the United States is $32,700. That means that half the country is earning less than that. If you're like a lot of /.ers and are a college-educated person working in technology, you should understand that your experience of life in America is nothing like what the majority of Americans experience. You are probably earning twice what the average American earns. You probably have quite a lot of disposable income and may have significant net worth. The average American family has negative savings and buys very little that isn't absolutely necessary to survive (food, clothing, housing, medical care, transportation, utilities).
The reasons you might not be aware of these disparities are:
- You probably live far away from the people who earn a lot less than you, so you don't see how people like that live.
- You probably don't interact with people who earn a lot less than you on a regular basis. Or if you do, you see them as (for example) "that guy behind the fast food counter" or "the woman who cleans my office", rather than as flesh-and-blood people just like you.
- Media do not regularly portray people in that economic situation.
Re:NOOOOOOO (Score:4, Insightful)
Good point. For a bit of perspective, I'm 65 and getting paid social security. With the recent raise, I get $500/month. Rent is $110/wk. in winter, $105 in summer, plus $10/wk. if you've an air conditioner in a window. To bring me up to, as I understand it, legal minimums, I also get $190 in SSI and $83 and change from the state. Internet is $38 some-odd per month. Tack on phone minutes, household and personal consumables. Were it not for what's still called Food Stamps I don't think that I could make it. That's worth $200/mo.
My apartment is ~216 sq./ft. including the bathroom, in a house built in the 1880s; it's charming, with two 20-amp shared circuits, and I'm lacking a UPS. Place has a gas stove, half-height reefer, and a microwave. In this city, this is a good deal.
Figuring out what to do with the remainder of my riches is an interesting exercise. Yet I've got it better than a substantial percentage of our fellow humans. There is no local war and I've got Medicare, without which I'd probably be dead. I even got to keep the leg.
"Life's a bitch, then you die. If you're lucky, you get in her pants first."
Cheers.
Oh, yeah: in principle I can see where sales tax on internet purchases could be fair. How to collect it without the collection measures costing more than collections, not so much.
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Not having a pension from an employer is in fact quite common in the US. Also not uncommon is cases where people were supposed to have a pension from an employer, but the employer in question raided the pension fund on its way to not existing any longer, so the pension doesn't exist.
Social Security is a state pension program, as you gathered. It's not exactly enough to live on, as the parent post demonstrates, and right now about half of the politicians in Washington DC want to get rid of it entirely on the
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Mostly brick and mortar retailers and retailers that have a presence in most states. They've been at a competitive disadvantage to online retailers that don't collect the sales tax. Around here sales tax is 9% and that's rather significant when you realize that in many cases that's more than the cost of shipping.
I'm not even sure how I would go about paying the sales tax on those purchases as my home state doesn't have an income tax so we don't fill out any state tax forms where one might normally declare t
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This tax would be collected from the retailer, just like a normal sales tax, not from the end purchaser. Technically, at least a few states already require you to pay a "usage" tax on things bought online or over the phone (from out-of-state), but that requires the purchaser to pay the tax, not the seller, so it ends up not being paid. Thats why the states want to go after the retailers: because then it becomes much easier for the state to enforce the taxes, which they currently cannot.
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You missed the point, there is no tax form for that in this state that I know of, and without really digging for it and keeping records it would be impossible to pay. The burden very quickly adds up to being more than the taxes that I would be on the hook for.
Yeah, legally we're supposed to, but the burden is far lower if the retailer just collects the tax and remits it to the state, AFAIK, they're permitted to keep a small portion to help cover the cost of collection.
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What's more it's unduly burdensome on the consumer to have to keep track of such sales for the state.
Then maybe you should get your state legislators to change your tax laws. Why should somebody in another state have to keep track of the tax laws in every municipality in every state in the country? If you think it is an unreasonable burden on you to keep track of sales tax, think about the burden on a small, one-person business that sells a couple hundred dollars a year in merchandise over the Internet.
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Have you actually done that?
There's nothing particularly trivial about it. Even if software calculates the number this means that each small business will have to remit payments at least quarterly to 50 different authorities. That's a major pain in the ass. Even if it takes less than an hour per state, that's someone's full time job for a month of the year.
The consider that some states tax shipping, most don't, and I believe some states even tax free shipping at the actual value. NY doesn't tax clothing und
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It's not that complicated.
A central agency publishes a table once a year of the rates for 5 digit zipcodes. Each zipcode has an associated entity.
Retailers pay quarterly with a single check and a spreadsheet by entity.
And, yes, there are a handful of zipcodes with multiple entities. Either they work out and submit to central their split, or the funds stay in escrow until they do.
hawk
Should be collected by the feds (Score:5, Interesting)
If the tax crosses state borders, then it should be collected by the Feds - or at least the rules should be national and consistent. Collect, say, 5% from everyone and then distribute it according to billing address. Making merchants deal with 50 different tax codes is onerous. I hope this bill is defeated.
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Won't work. Here in San Diego we have several ZIP codes where there are 2 sales tax rates within the ZIP code depending on the exact address. Parts of the ZIP code are within a city, subject to city sales tax, and parts are outside the city and city sales tax isn't due. To get the rate right you need to know not just the ZIP code but whether that particular address is inside or outside the city limits. And the state of California can't tell you which it is, the state doesn't know the exact city boundary. I
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
I remember someone posting to slashdot years ago explaining you had to do it by recipient, not even house. They lived on an Indian reservation, and were not part of the tribe. So they paid higher sales tax than their neighbors who were members of the tribe.
Expecting anyone to collect sales tax based on shipping or billing address is foolish. What's going to end up happening if the Feds don't just set an easy to compute rate, is that there will be one or two new companies that will spring up to collect th
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Multiply the cost of that database and the time used to hook your systems into it and the cost of submitting all those taxes by the number of businesses shipping goods and you have a pretty big number, I suspect. The alternative is you could have a single simple rule for everyone that captures 90% of the problem.
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You mean like an API that's handled at the federal level? That's the only way the collection side might work. But remitting the actual sales taxes will still be terrible. - especially sending tax payments of $0.43 to some random municipality that charges city sales tax (if that's included in the bill).
Re:Should be collected by the feds (Score:5, Interesting)
And, sorry, but a database of zip codes does NOT match up to the boundaries of taxing jurisdictions.
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I'm starting one up now. My state government has 3 different departments to contact to start a business. A large number of the online resources link to 404 pages. IRS is surprisingly more competent, but only hand out EINs during business days but with slightly extended hours. Thankfully, I am not having any employees. All of the "employees" are co-owners of the LLC. We're doing web design stuff, and maybe selling some products we make. It won't make us a ton of money, bu
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Re:Should be collected by the feds (Score:4, Insightful)
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Making merchants deal with 50 different tax codes is onerous.
I dare say that's exactly the point. Why do you think brick-and-mortars are so happy about it?
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Making merchants deal with 50 different tax codes is onerous.
I dare say that's exactly the point. Why do you think brick-and-mortars are so happy about it?
Fifty codes is nothing. I can keep 50 codes taped to the side of my server. It's all those city/county/Enterprise Zone/speciality business/foo-nonfood/tax holiday/special assessment rules that's onerous.
Give me 50 codes, and I'm happy.
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I dare say that's exactly the point. Why do you think brick-and-mortars are so happy about it?
They probably won't be for long. Actually, they probably just legislated their own death certificate. Amazon's next plan is to put warehouses in major metro areas & provide same day or one day delivery. Residents with a PC (or smartphone) & a bank account will never have to drive to a "big-box" store ever again if they don't want to.
Re:Should be collected by the feds (Score:4, Interesting)
Making merchants deal with 50 different tax codes is onerous.
I dare say that's exactly the point. Why do you think brick-and-mortars are so happy about it?
Because they're stupid?
Amazon is supporting this bill because of their new "same-day delivery" that is being rolled out. It requires them to have a presence in every state, so they'd have to collect sales tax anyway. This bill would put all other online stores at the same disadvantage of having to collect taxes, but without the advantage of actually having a point of presence in every state.
If this bill passes, it will give Amazon another reason to accelerate the roll out, and eliminate the one advantage that B&M stores currently have.
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The problem with that is that around here the sales tax is 9.5%, which would mean that the city and or state would be losing revenue that they're entitled to collect. Considering the state of the nation, it's not that burdensome, what would likely happen is they would just contract out the work of tracking such changes to a contractor.
It's not just 50 states, it's all the municipalities that are entitled to collect sales tax in various states. In Seattle that's about 3% on top of the state sales tax of 6.5%
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The problem with that is that around here the sales tax is 9.5%, which would mean that the city and or state would be losing revenue that they're entitled to collect.
Right now they are getting 0%. Something tells me they won't complain that loudly. I'd argue that since the business has no local presence, it is not using any state services and should not be paying full tax anyway.
It's not just 50 states, it's all the municipalities that are entitled to collect sales tax in various states.
That would bring the total up to 10,000 different tax codes, then. I think my point is even stronger in that case.
Don't get too hung up on "5%". I just pulled that number out of my ass.
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What you're talking about is a pretty substantial violation of states' rights. The Supreme Court has already ruled that states can assess these taxes, just that the method of collection can't be unduly burdensome, and that ruling is 20 years old and done prior to the point when it was trivial to set up a database for all the retailers to reference.
And yes, they will complain loudly about it. My home state has no income tax, and OR has no sales tax. So, OR would see no difference at all from this, but my hom
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What you're talking about is a pretty substantial violation of states' rights.
How is this not "Interstate Commerce"?
Quote from Article 1, Section 8:
Sound familiar? :)
And then a few lines down:
So I'm pretty sure we are on firm
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If the tax crosses state borders, then it should be collected by the Feds
Why insert more ham-fisted bureaucracy when it isn't necessary? Vendors can issue tax payments directly to the states, instead of having vendors collect taxes, send it to the Feds, and then have them send it to the states? I'm not in favor of an internet sales tax, but if it's going to happen, I'd rather not have the feds involved at all, as that will just turn into another cash-grab opportunity when they decide we need a national sales tax.
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Why insert more ham-fisted bureaucracy when it isn't necessary?
How is suggesting interacting with a single bureaucracy worse than dealing with 50?
Vendors can issue tax payments directly to the states, instead of having vendors collect taxes, send it to the Feds, and then have them send it to the states?
I could get on board with that. I still want a single rate that applies to everyone. I, personally, would hate to write 50 checks and do 50 sets of paperwork every year, but I'm sure Intuit will get right on it.
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How is suggesting interacting with a single bureaucracy worse than dealing with 50?
How difficult is it to query a database for transactions based on sales by state, multiply that total by the tax rate and EFT a payment? Yes, it will be slightly more complicated than that, but it really shouldn't be. From a programming standpoint, it should be fairly trivial. The one way that the Feds could be helpful would be by requiring standardized reporting for the states.
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If the tax crosses state borders, then it should be collected by the Feds - or at least the rules should be national and consistent. Collect, say, 5% from everyone and then distribute it according to billing address. Making merchants deal with 50 different tax codes is onerous. I hope this bill is defeated.
It's not 50, it's closer to 10,000 (according to TFA). Different counties can have different tax rates (even a zip code doesn't guarantee a single tax rate).
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These are state and local taxes, not federal. The biggest reason this has gone so long is by which party do you determine the tax to apply?
IE, the legal question is in what location is the sale considered to have occured when between two parties in two physically seperate locations?
The simplest solution is to have it based on the sellers location, since they are also the one responsible for collecting applicable taxes. then they only have to apply their local applicable taxes , rather than keep tabs on ever
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Last I heard it was about 6700 tax codes, after figuring in all the state, county, and local taxes and various classes of specially-tariffed items.
But the heaviest burden would be on merchants in States that have no sales taxes. They'd be suddenly required to collect sales taxes for other States, which they're not equipped to do, all because those other States don't feel like enforcing their own tax codes.
That's not how a Republic of Republics works.
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Under the existing bill, the states can all come after you individually. It might be 12%, it might be 2% - depends on where your customer lives. I'm proposing to either leave it the hell alone, or implement a single blanket rate that applies to all customers, who would then be immune from any local use taxes on that item.
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I'm proposing to either leave it the hell alone, or implement a single blanket rate that applies to all customers, who would then be immune from any local use taxes on that item.
Hm, sound suggestions... which is why they'll never even be considered.
Re:Should be collected by the feds (Score:4, Informative)
Yeah, the Interstate Commerce Clause [wikipedia.org].
The constitution says that states can't interfere with cross border transactions as it is a power reserved for the federal government. It also prohibits the federal government from interfering with state affairs like revenue collection. This catch-22 is why the whole issue has been kicked down the road to this day.
This isn't a new problem caused by the internet either. Old fashioned snail mail orders from out of state suppliers (think Sears and Roebuck in the 19th century) were also a thorn in some states sides which is why they expect citizens to declare "use" tax on what they imported from out of state.
Getting the rates (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd be OK with sales tax on on-line sales, on one condition: states be required to provide a standard way for merchants, at no cost to the merchant, to ask what the sales tax rate for a given address should be, with the answer being the legally binding rate (if the merchant charges the rate given in that answer then the merchant cannot be held liable if that rate turns out to be wrong, and if the service failed to answer for any reason then the merchant can't be held liable for failing to charge sales tax).
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That makes collection easy. But say you have to collect city sales tax. Only one customer bought anything from you from Midnwhere, AR. You have to spend $0.46 to pay 2% collected city sales tax amounting to $0.36 to that town. That's just insane, and illustrates the true problem.
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$0.46 is the price of a postage stamp. I meant to say that.
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I'd say that's not the merchant's problem. If the state wants to have out-of-state merchants collect sales tax for it, then the merchants just remit to the state according to the rate the state sets. It's up to the state to distribute anything due to entities under it's jurisdiction like counties and cities. Or if the state doesn't want to collect taxes at that level, it can fight it out with the cities and counties. If it turns out the state wants merchants to collect city and county tax and remit it separ
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Yes, I find that more than half the time I am charged the tax rate for the city in which the post office that serves my address is located; which is about triple the tax rate that actually applies at my address. I put this down to the use of some database somewhere that uses 5-digit ZIP codes instead of 9-digit ones to determine the tax rate.
And the vast majority of the companies that overcharge me in this way simply ignore requests to fix the problem. I vote with my dollars, and tell them that I'm doing so
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charge sales tax based on the vendors location rather than the buyers.
then its just business like normal for the vendor.
downside is it means "your" tax dollars go to other locales instead of your own...but it does mean vastly simpler collection system, no database required (and no location verification needed)
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That's great and all (Score:2)
but I hardly think that an amendment to a provisioning bill passes sufficient legal muster for it be enforced. First of all, I am already required to pay local and state sales taxes for entities operating out of my state. So no change there.
But for extra-state sales, this will have to survive a 10th Amendment challenge and well settled legal precedence dating back to the 18th century. Not saying that it can't but a short blurb in a different, unrelated law doesn't seem sufficient on its face.
For an "interne
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Not really... many states have forms of 'use tax'es which kick in when you purchase something out of state and then bringing it into state... and depending on how much tax you paid out of state.
Here in Washington (state for instance)... if one take a drive down to Oregon and purchase a couple thousand dollars worth of electronics sales tax free (because OR has no s
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Not really... many states have forms of 'use tax'es which kick in when you purchase something out of state and then bringing it into state... and depending on how much tax you paid out of state.
Which is what I was saying. It's a well defined legal area that's been administrated by the states for a very long time now. For the Feds to step in with a new law, they'd have to show (to whatever court this gets taken to) some sort of legal authority over it where none existed before both as in the US Constitution as through well settled and aged legal precedence.
It's not as easy as saying "Interstate Commerce lets us" as it's never before been defined as such. Doesn't mean that it won't get upheld on tha
Vote with your dollars? (Score:2)
There goes one of the best ways to vote with your dollars.
I can still make political campaign donations to my heart's content. That's what you mean by "vote with your dollars", right? Right?
I honestly think... (Score:4, Insightful)
That we really need to close this loop hole. I'm not in favor of raising taxes or anything, but by making this law, we'd be going back to a revenue model that we know. The ripple effect would be we wouldn't get tax hikes in other places I'd imagine.
And the government does need the money... it would be nice to see them get it internally, but that's idealism. We need pot holes fixed, bridges replaced, and maybe we could throw money at some of the issues we're behind the rest of the world on.
Another ripple would be brick and mortar stores would regain some traction against online retailers, the argument used to be that shipping > tax, but that's dramatically changed over the last decade with free shipping being pretty easy to get as online firms compete against each other.
The downside is of course less money for the savvy consumer, but history has taught us loop holes never end well, so I think the benefits outweigh the downside.
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Two words: instant gratification .
If you're not saving money anymore, you'd be surprised how much more justifiable it becomes to get something today rather than in a week. Most people leave their homes for work / errands / social occasions, so swinging by a brick and mortar is less of a big deal for some than others.
Corporate Taxes? (Score:5, Insightful)
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And the government does need the money
Then they can get it from the rich, who are doing better today than they were in 2008. Those of us whose budgets are stretched already can't pay more in tax without cutting back purchases elsewhere. This will hurt the lower classes, and it will hurt the economy and the country as a whole.
Bullshit. Many States don't even have Sales Tax (Score:2, Interesting)
This is a State decision, not a Federal one.
will drive online shopping overseas (Score:2)
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You may have to wait a little longer, but people will start buying from Canada or other places without taxes.
I really doubt that. Based on what I see on other forums, most US consumers refuse to buy almost anything if they have to buy it online. I see people all the time who shlep down to their local brick and mortar store to pay more money, spend more time and get a worse quality product than something they could buy cheaper and of higher quality online. Ever been the grocery store or Wal-Mart and noticed how many people refuse to use the self-checkout line? I rest my case.
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If that were true, then the problem solved by this bill would be too trivial to make it worth the bother.
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It's kind of insidious as well.. (Score:5, Insightful)
As it will cover all Ebay sales and Craigslist sales.
They want to charge you tax on even items you are not making money off of. Next up, Evil Garage sales and Flea Markets, how can we tax this scourge to the economy?
Craigslist does process $ transactions. (Score:3)
As it will cover all Ebay sales and Craigslist sales.
They want to charge you tax on even items you are not making money off of. Next up, Evil Garage sales and Flea Markets, how can we tax this scourge to the economy?
Ebay yes. Craigslist no. Craigslist does not make sales, the people interacting directly do, and the overwhelming majority of these are local.
No Tax or Duty shall be laid on Articles exported (Score:5, Insightful)
"No Tax or Duty shall be laid on Articles exported from any State." - Article 1, US Constitution.
It seems to me, that any such legislation would be a tax being exported from one state to another. I don't believe a distinction can be made from those being exported and those being imported, since it is only matter of perspective. A tax on imports to a state is a tax on the same article being exported from another. There is no limit to the prohibition. It could also read: "All taxes and duties are prohibited on all articles being exported from any State."
no online sales tax is an individual tax break (Score:3)
Make it a federal tax (Score:2)
Figure out some way to disburse to states based on shipping address. As posters have noted, there's not a current way consistent with the Constitution to charge state tax on interstate commerce.
Shipping companies will love this (Score:4, Insightful)
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I'm given to understand taxes are of no value to balancing budgets.
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Well, first you'd need a budget.
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I'm given to understand taxes are of no value to balancing budgets.
State sales taxes are of no value to balancing federal budgets.
Actually, the increase in state sales tax will probably result in less federal income taxes collected, because they can be claimed as a federal income tax deduction.
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When the states are hurting because of their own misguided decisions... they often go to the feds looking for a bailout (either in name or in practice).
Whenever you hear the president talk about how billions and billions of cops, teachers, etc will be laid off if his bill doesn't pass... it is because the feds are subsidizing many a state.
Ergo, if states were more responsible in their own financial matters (and we didn't have an overbearing fede
Re:Typical (Score:5, Informative)
They haven't done the obvious. Cancel federal income tax and replace it with a sales tax. It'd be a whole lot easier to handle businesses than it would be individuals.
In 2009, there were just under 6,000,000 active businesses.
In 2009, there were 140,494,127 individual tax returns filed.
The IRS employs about 93,000 employees and is expected to hire 16,500 more.
By eliminating the individual filing requirement, you'd eliminate almost 96% of the returns.
IRS agents have an average salary near $75,000 [glassdoor.com].
Let's say you applied 4 times the labor to each business return.
Then only about 18,000 staff are required to handle the load.
91,500 jobs would be cut for an annual savings of $6.8 billion.
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Wait.. you want to put almost 100,000 people out of work that used to WORK FOR THE IRS!?
Yeah, that's excatly what we need. 50,000 people on the street with cardboard signs saying "Please give what you can, its tax deductible under city ordinance 41.4b, clause 2, section 4, paragraph 2.C"
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Umm, wasn't it techncially a "representation" revolt? Taxes are needed to pay for the services that are provided. Taxation without political power in return is what was the cause of the revolt.
Re:Anyone tell these idiots... (Score:4, Insightful)
Umm, wasn't it techncially a "representation" revolt? Taxes are needed to pay for the services that are provided. Taxation without political power in return is what was the cause of the revolt.
Yep, exactly. Which makes it even more relevant to the present case, not less.
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It doesn't make it relevant at all. The proposed law will just make it easier for States to collect their already existing sales taxes for online purchases. If you don't like the sales tax in your State you're free to move to one with a lower tax or to vote for State representatives/senators who will change it.
The knee jerk reactions here are amusing sometimes.
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But aside form DC we all have reprint action in the senate. While we don't have control over individual issues, we can vote out the bastards if we don't like them.
... every 2-4 years... only to replace them with other bastards from a remarkably small pool.
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Technically yes – but the rabble rousing was anti-tax.
Re:Anyone tell these idiots... (Score:5, Insightful)
If you'll check a history book, you'll find the rallying cry was not "No Taxation" but rather "No Taxation Without Representation". Huge difference.
Re:Anyone tell these idiots... (Score:5, Informative)
If you'll check a history book, you'll find the rallying cry was not "No Taxation" but rather "No Taxation Without Representation". Huge difference.
"Taxation without Representation is Tyranny" was the cry. Freedom, not freeloading.
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-Adam Smith, "The Wealth of Nations", Book V, Chapter II, Part II, pg.927
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If you'll check a history book, you'll find the rallying cry was not "No Taxation" but rather "No Taxation Without Representation". Huge difference.
Yes, taxation without representation was cheaper.
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I see what you did there... you made specific claims which you opted not to substantiate... care to try again?
Re:Anyone tell these idiots... (Score:5, Informative)
Um no. freeloaders have not come anywhere near 50% of the voters. The so called 47% contains large blocks of people who are not freeloaders.
1. About 60% of those not paying federal income taxes pay other federal taxes such as SS and Medicare. Not to mention local taxes such as property taxes and sales taxes.
2. Wealthy people whose income comes from tax free bonds pay no federal income taxes. However they pay other local taxes on property etc.
3. About 20% of the 47% are retired elderly people who have paid a lifetime of SS and Medicare taxes.
Finally a significant proportion of these people vote for Republicans. Various polls show that above 50% of the elderly vote Republican, and about 1/3 of the people who are exempt from federal income tax due to earning less than $24000 vote Republican.
So basically the idea that a majority of 'freeloading' Americans are going to perpetuate their situation by en-masse voting for progressive candidates is ridiculous bullshit. There isn't any such majority of freeloaders in the first place, and secondly the voting pattern of low income people is not as monolithic as you propose.
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Once the freeloaders exceed 50% of the vote ... they will simply use the power of the government ... to steal from the rest of the productive population.
We're in no danger of that, because there's nothing true about that sentence:
1. Only 17% of households pay no income and no payroll tax. As soon as you factor in Social Security and Medicare, there are very few freeloaders.
2. Of those 17%, nearly all pay sales taxes and/or property taxes to state and local governments, and many pay federal gasoline taxes, cigarette taxes, and other federal sales taxes. In other words, they aren't freeloaders.
3. Your population of "freeloaders" basically consists of: Retiree
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The library called, you really need to return that copy of Atlas Shrugged.
WTF is an objectivist doing borrowing books from a library? Don't they realize that public libraries are SOCIALISM????
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IMO that'd be another thing I'd push: if on-line merchants are expected to collect taxes based on the buyer's place of residence, then brick-and-mortar stores should also have to collect it that way. So if I walk into a store in Nevada, they have to look up the sale tax due in San Diego, CA and collect that and remit it to California.
Brick-and-mortar retailers, I'd like to introduce you to this guy named Procrustes.
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You need more money Federal Gov? Stop wasting it.
This isn't to allow the feds to collect taxes, it's to allow states to collect states sales tax on purchases made over the internet, regardless of the state where the vendor has a physical presence.
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Shoes would probably be the one thing I'd never buy online.
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Here's the deal..
I don't mind paying for bridges, roads, police officers, and other such vital services. In fact, if I could see a garantee that the money collected went for *those things*, and not "senator Taint Brownstain's new fantastic porkbarrel boondoggle that 'so totally isn't the pro quo from quid pro quo'", I wouldn't complain about taxation.
However, since all fed tax money gets stirred up in a big pot, I get no such assurances.
I don't like financing the killing of brown people, just because I want