California Assembly Approves Internet Tax 454
ClientNine writes "California could collect more than $1 billion a year by taxing Amazon and other online retailers if a bill approved by the Assembly becomes law. Assemblyman Charles Calderon, a Democrat from Whittier, says his legislation doesn't impose a new sales tax, but extends one that California should already have been enforcing. AB155 passed, 47-16, with the support of one GOP lawmaker Tuesday. It now heads to the Senate. Other Republicans rejected the bill because they said it would invite lawsuits, drive business out of California, and get the state entangled in the messy task of regulating the Internet."
I guess I just won't buy stuff online anymore. (Score:3)
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oregon has no sales tax.
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oregon has no sales tax.
But Texas has jobs [star-telegram.com].
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oregon has no sales tax.
But Texas has jobs [star-telegram.com].
But Texas has no Amazon.com jobs [bloomberg.com].
I would like to invite Amazon... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Of course after all the Californians move there it won't be a low tax, low regulation state for long.
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It's just when some other state decides to mandate that out-of-state companies should act as their agents to enforce their tax laws that there's a problem.
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If only Montana could do that without relying on handouts from other states [scribd.com] such as California.
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Its really easy to have a balanced budget when your state's population is sub 1 million and half of your state is excluded from needing state services because its a national park.
Also it routinely hits -30 in Montana, travelling by road is often out of the question and there is probably only one or two decent restaurants in the whole state.
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Montana doesn't run deficits like other states for many reasons including a requirement in their constitution to have a balanced budget so Montana doesn't spend more than it takes in. States like California needs to have such provisions if they ever hope to remain solvent.
Speaking of people who don't what they're talking about, California has EXACTLY that provision in its state constitution. It's worth about as much as the Assembly Speaker's toilet paper.
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And pretending that there is some debate when there isn't is very "fair and balanced" of you. Equal time to all the crackpots, right?
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Yes, all facets - no matter how irresponsibly wrong.
No, I'm not referring to evolution.
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Can anyone recommend a few states where these taxes are unlikely
Unlikely for how long exactly? There are states that don't have it at the moment, but whether it will stay that way long enough to make moving there worth it seems dependent on how much you buy online and how likely the legislators of that state are to realize that you can buy things on these newfangled tubes.
While I like not paying taxes on purchases, and recognize that in practice it might be impossible to enforce on -all- web transactions, I can't think of a good reason why online purchases SHOULD be
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Taxation without Representation sounds like a good reason to me.
Make the buyer responsible, not the seller, which is ALREADY the way it is in most states.
Re:I guess I just won't buy stuff online anymore. (Score:5, Insightful)
I can't think of a good reason why online purchases SHOULD be exempt while things you buy in a store should have the tax.
1: Amazon isn't using any state services such as street lighting, sewers, electricity, police protection, and the like that your state taxes pay for.
2: You don't get instant delivery the way you will from a local merchant (i.e. the playing field isn't totally tilted towards Amazon).
3: You have a much smaller carbon footprint buying from Amazon verses driving your car to the mall (a plus to the environment).
4: You have to pay shipping on top of your purchase costs (the unfair Amazon discount over not paying local taxes is substantially offset by this.)
5: If states get this tax, how long before they start trying to tax Amazon profits from every individual state?
6: Without Amazon and the like, your local stores have a virtual monopoly over providing you these items. How much do you think that is a good thing for the consumer?
Re:I guess I just won't buy stuff online anymore. (Score:4, Informative)
I don't have a problem with California collecting sales tax on online purchases, so long as that tax is significantly less than the full sales tax, in light of the fact that they shouldn't pay for services they aren't getting. Of course, it won't be. They'll charge the full tax rate simply because they can. As for shipping, costs offsetting it, Amazon offers free shipping on most orders. In spite of rolling the shipping cost into the purchase price, they still come out cheaper than local merchants most of the time, and that's before you factor in sales tax. So it is leveling the playing field a bit, but it still doesn't compensate for California's exorbitant cost of living, land costs, construction costs, etc.
The bigger problem here is that Amazon only has a legal obligation to pay that tax as long as they have a nexus in California. Amazon has no physical presence in California. California is attempting to extend the definition of nexus to include affiliates.
So here's what will happen: California will pass the law. The day it goes into effect, Amazon will terminate its affiliate relationships with everyone in California, and will continue doing business normally without paying a dime of sales taxes. This is what has happened in every state that has passed similar laws, and there's no reason any sane, intelligent person would believe that Amazon would value California affiliates so highly that they would not cut them off in a heartbeat if it meant not losing a sizable percentage of California sales to other companies that don't have to charge CA sales tax. So basically, when this law is passed (and it almost certainly will be, given that our lawmakers are, by and large, idiots), the result will be a substantial loss to California's economy, which will result in a substantial loss in state tax revenue (all of those affiliates were paying California income tax on their earnings) without bringing in a single penny in sales tax revenue.
That said, it will set a great precedent if California does this. I'd be willing to place a bet that once Amazon shows that it has the stones to scrape off its California affiliates with about as much concern as you or I would scrape gum off of our shoes, no other state will be so stupid as to try this. Then again, there's that Einstein quote....
Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.
—Albert Einstein
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The day it goes into effect, Amazon will terminate its affiliate relationships with everyone in California, and will continue doing business normally without paying a dime of sales taxes. This is what has happened in every state that has passed similar laws, and there's no reason any sane, intelligent person would believe that Amazon would value California affiliates so highly that they would not cut them off in a heartbeat if it meant not losing a sizable percentage of California sales to other companies that don't have to charge CA sales tax
I'm not familiar with the internal workings of Amazon, but I don't see how they could possibly just drop the world's 8th largest economy and suffer no losses. Are you saying the amount they'd lose by paying taxes would be greater than the amount they make on sales to California? Because I'm skeptical of that. I guess I'm not sane or intelligent.
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If you have half a brain, your shipping is capped at $75 bucks per year... and that also gets you access to a 5,000+ (and growing) title video library.
We pay a lot more sales tax than $75 per year.
I like the internet model- but I understand how states depend on there actually being local businesses to continue operation.
7. you like having jobs right? Buying from Amazon pumps huge amounts of money DIRECTLY out of the state's economy into another state. Where you used to buy from a local store and their emp
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6: Without Amazon and the like, your local stores have a virtual monopoly over providing you these items.
I don't think amazon and the like would disappear because they were taxed like other businesses. Even if they did, I still wouldn't be limited to "local" stores. Even if I were, that's STILL not a monopoly.
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The bill affects Californians buying products from out-of-state products. It only affects the retailers in that they no longer get unfair competition vs. businesses located *in* California. Sales tax is paid by the buyer - it's just usually collected by the seller, since the buyer can't be trusted to pay it. CA has always taxed these purchases and buyers are supposed to report their purchases, it just hasn't had a way of enforcing it...
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It's not just a matter of trust, the stores aren't required to report the sales to the state, the consumers are unlikely to know how and where to pay the taxes they owe. It's been my feeling for some time that it's ridiculous to expect customers to collect and pay the taxes as we're not given any particularly efficient way to do it and there isn't any actual enforcement of the law anyways.
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>>we're not given any particularly efficient way to pay the taxes
Yes there is. It's located on your State Income Tax return under "use taxes". You are supposed to pay x% of every purchase that was imported from another state (typically equal to the sales tax).
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People keep saying things like this and thinking they're clever... It's a pretty stupid argument. Tragedy of the commons, perception of fairness, and all that. There's a difference between being willing to pay more taxes if everyone else at a similar income level is going to do the same,
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"The first part seems simple enough, until I discovered that every county in California has a different sales tax, and I'm responsible for knowing what county somebody is in and applying the right sales tax formula."
Which seems overwhelming, until you find out current and comprehensive sales tax rate tables are published by the state in easily read electronic formats (csv, excel). Coding against a simple lookup table to find the tax rate is beyond trivial.
This is a complete non-problem.
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New Hampshire [freestateproject.org].
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Re:I guess I just won't buy stuff online anymore. (Score:4, Insightful)
They're not wrong.
When you say you don't like taxes you say you think corporate America can provide everything you need cheaper.
Ever really think about that possibility?
Re:I guess I just won't buy stuff online anymore. (Score:4, Funny)
How dare you malign the Holy Free Market and its divine prophets, the Corporations. If we just get government off their backs, these angelic entities will provide us with lucrative jobs and cheap products instead of doing what they do now, which is rape us, rob us, and invest all the money they stole from us in jobs overseas. I know this is true because they paid people to tell me so.
Re:I guess I just won't buy stuff online anymore. (Score:4, Informative)
And the power they have amassed would just go away if the government did? Fat. Fucking. Chance. Tell you what, go back to the fifteen hundreds and tell the Dutch that corporations are a bad idea.
The thing is, without the government, corporations would have MORE power, as there would be no one to limit their power. Right now, government is a check on corporate power. Get rid of government, and corporations won't go away. Who will make them? Who will say that what they are doing, and the way they are organized, is wrong or illegal? No one. You think it takes a government to make a corporation? How so? Without government, we wouldn't even have the limits that are set by a corporate charter. You don't need a government to have corporations. All governments do is LIMIT corporations, not create them. What do you think corporate law is? You don't get rid of corporations by getting rid of the laws which govern them.
Welcome to the idiocy of libertarianism, where consequences don't matter because we all have free will and personal responsibility and we just need to believe real hard and clap our hands together and tinker bell will come back to life.
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Since 1910, governments have killed approximately 200 million of their OWN citizens, typically through planned genocide. (The number rises over 1 billion if you include non-citizens killed in war.) How many millions have corporations killed? (Essentially zero million.)
>>>Get rid of government
Libertarians are not anarchists. Libertarians support having a government in order to keep the corporations from treading on Citizens' Rights. In fact many libertarians, like me, would abolish corporation
Re:I guess I just won't buy stuff online anymore. (Score:4)
Corporations haven't killed people? How fucking clueless can you be?
Hint: look outside of the first world for once in your life.
By the way, how is the government going to keep corporations from treading on Citizens' Rights without taxes? Because that's what this whole "debate" is about. The government wants to collect taxes, and you libertarian-anarchists are screaming that it's an assault on freedom.
Re:I guess I just won't buy stuff online anymore. (Score:4, Interesting)
Considering the history of business in the world I know for a fact that without regulation, rules, and governance those corporations will steal, poison and murder to make more money.
So why not allow the government to do it? We have more control over them than we do businesses.
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Do we? In order to change government, you need to convince a plurality of voters that you're right. Then they have to actually vote your way (e.g. the issue is important enough to them to vote or change votes), then the guy you elected has to actually follow through on the promise, which may be dependent on other elections (and requires more convincing). E.g. an anti-drug war president needs Congress to end the drug war. This also ignores the legions of bureaucrats and regulators who are unelected and have
Re:I guess I just won't buy stuff online anymore. (Score:4, Informative)
If you don't want to be a statist, move to Somalia.
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Like trillion dollar wars? DEA? There are tons of negative "services" that soak up tons of money. Not that that is an argument for or against taxation.
This is a non-event for those who paid taxes (Score:3, Informative)
So this is effectively the Use Tax which everyone was already supposed to be paying.
The usual suspects up in arms complaining about this are likely doing so because they were previously dodging taxes by not properly including their purchases on their tax returns.
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Exactly. Everyone loves to cheat on their taxes.
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Everyone loves to cheat on their taxes.
That's what people who cheat on their taxes say to make themselves feel better.
Re:This is a non-event for those who paid taxes (Score:5, Insightful)
Except they're now forcing businesses in other states to collect and remit taxes for items sold to Californians. This should be interesting because they're creating an interstate commerce tax which should normally be the jurisdiction of the Feds. Given the Feds got bent out of shape about Arizona doing the same with immigration, they either have to push a double-standard, or correct California's overstepping of authority.
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Catalogues have been collecting several state's sales taxes for years -- any state they have a business presence in. Saying that this is an "interstate sales tax" is like saying that the sales tax you paid on your factory-customized Chrysler is an international sales tax because it was shipped from Brampton, Ontario. The fact that in one case you meet someone face-to-face (the dealer) in your state that makes the deal and you don't in the other makes no difference from the perspective of your tax obligati
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Except they're now forcing businesses in other states to collect and remit taxes for items sold to Californians.
No they're not. They're only collecting taxes from online companies with a physical presence in California.
FTFB:
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Actually, I went and unraveled the legalese in the actual text of the law. You're partially right. They're still forcing taxes in other states to remit taxes, but have exemption clauses that put those requirements on hold until "the enactment of any congressional act that authorizes states to compel the collection of state sales and use taxes by out-of-state retailers."
Funny how they leave that out of the summaries of the bill.
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>>>Except they're now forcing businesses in other states to collect and remit taxes for items sold to Californians.
Which means it is unenforceable. California can no more tax a non-citizen (or business) than France can tax a guy living in Poland. You can't force non-citizens to comply with your fucked-up California laws. - No taxation without representation. - No juris diction beyond your borders.
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I like this quote.
"Get the state entangled in the messy task of regulating the Internet."
In other words the messy task of... governing. Welcome to government. Your job as a legislator is to solve the messy problems of regulating business, commerce and citizens.
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Collect 1B a year? (Score:2)
Sure they will.. They might lose that much however, as companies move out of state and leave people unemployed.
Re:Collect 1B a year? (Score:5, Insightful)
They might lose that much however, as companies move out of state and leave people unemployed.
Maybe, but there are teachers, school employees, government workers, law enforcement, and a large number of other people working on tax dollars that are definitely facing unemployment too due to the budget shortcomings. The legislature should ideally weigh the harms of that against the potential disadvantages of actually collecting a tax they said they were going to tax and those companies should have been budgeting for in the first place...
But of course I'm not even fooling myself, this WILL BE decided based on lobbyists and how willing we voters are to believe that all taxes are evil things that only hurt us.
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This is only for sales/use tax. Retail companies don't budget for it...it's passed on directly to the consumer in almost all cases, or wrapped up in the price for where it's not a line item.
By having to collect a tax, it puts an online retailer at a disadvantage over other retailers th
Uhmmm (Score:2)
You do realize that those groups you listed effectively control the California Legislature through the power of their public employee's unions. In other words, any tax on anyone is acceptable as long as it presents the chance that employment of union members does not decrease nor the benefits granted to said members.
The big correction coming down the pike is government employees losing the majority of their benefits and possibly facing a lot of forced time off without pay. Its a fair question about which st
Re:Collect 1B a year? (Score:4, Informative)
Why would they leave? Tax is only being collected on purchases of in state companies to in state residents and that's up for debate. Products going out of state from California businesses aren't taxed unless the business has a nexus in the destination state, and that's not up for debate either. Only out of state businesses without a nexus in California are not required to collect sales/use tax for California, and that's the issue.
It's the last sentence that California is trying to change. Amazon for instance says they only have an advertising relationship in the state (e.g. they use a Ca-based marketing agency, buy ads, etc), no actual physical presence. Even if this gets passed and signed into law, it surely will be challenged as being unconstitutional, going against the interstate commerce clause.
Moving out of state really doesn't change anything for existing businesses. The only ones really affected are out of state businesses that feel they don't have an in-state presence, but California feels they do.
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Anybody that was tax conscious has already left the state. The taxes are sky high and the government seems hell bent on marrying the worst conservative benefit cuts with the worst liberal tax policies into an unholy state of high taxation and low governmental service.
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They might lose that much however, as companies move out of state and leave people unemployed.
And when the state decides that it will no longer do business with these companies and blocks their web sites from all state owned networks? Yeah, I'm sure that Amazon doesn't really want to get purchases from staff and students of the University of California system. I wonder what fraction of Amazon's MP3 purchases originate from UC campuses. I wonder what fraction of Amazon's cloud computing resources is allocated to people or projects at UC campuses. I wonder how much the competition would like to t
Taxation (Score:2, Insightful)
Once upon a time taxes got us a Revolution. Now they just get us pissy and twittery.
Representation (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Taxation (Score:5, Insightful)
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Even then that isn't the whole story.
To win Seven Year War (aka French-Indian War), the British Government had to drop a lot of cash on a huge war machine to win. So the British Parliament did the sensible thing: Ask the Americans which where ostensibly benefiting from this to help pay for it. The break down happened when the nature of the tax and what to do with the funds where in sharp divided between the American Colonies and the British Parliament.
So yes, it was lack of representation that was the pro
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This time around we have representation. And we dare not vote the current people out of office, lest the madmen on the other side of the isle take control.
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This time around we have representation
And it's the best representation money can buy!!!
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Eh, I think we've got a biased view of how things really went down. The truth is, politics today are very much like politics in the past. It's really just a power/money circle jerk amongst the wealthy.
We all learned about England taxing us and the Boston Tea party. What they didn't tell you in history class is that nobody was upset about 'taxation without representation'. As it turns out, there were some very wealthy people making a fortune 'smuggling' tea. They'd get tea elsewhere and thanks to the hi
Virtual goods (Score:2)
Amazon and other internet-only vendors may yank their California offices, but nowhere in the U.S. are there more virtual goods manufacturers than in California, Bay Area specifically.
Obviously we MUST do this! (Score:2)
We must tax innovative businesses that have low profit margins heavily, so that the taxes will be passed on to the consumer.
Otherwise we'd have to tax the highly profitable entrenched industries (like, um, say OIL COMPANIES) that could easily absorb tax increases without raising consumer prices.
And THAT would be so unamerican it would surely cause the earth to fall out of its orbit and go careening into the sun!
Ruining a good thing (Score:5, Funny)
The internet is the one sphere of human interaction where libertarianism seems to actually work, and I think the only reason it took off was because it's been a lawless free for all. Since the barriers to entry are so low for much of the internet economy, competition is the closest to free and open that humans have ever achieved; nothing like the real world equivalent. We are slowly ruining it with bandwidth caps and shaping, laws to protect imaginary property, and taxation.
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the internet was created as an ARPA then DARPA project, it's current greatest threats are the commercialization of the TLD system and the commercialization of access priority (attacks on network neutrality)
I seem to recall... (Score:2)
I seem to recall having seen online ordering a number of years ago where state taxes were being collected. You'd go to a site and see, "Michigan resident add 5% sales tax". They'd sometimes even be smart about it and check your ZIP code.
Then, some people didn't do that. Amazon didn't do it either; but a lot of small places didn't do it. States didn't do anything about it, either because they were behind the curve on the Internet, or they were too busy debating about gay abortions and hemp-scented trigge
FFS, it's not an "internet tax"! (Score:4, Informative)
This is a requirement to enforce existing sales tax on merchandise shipped in from out of state.
Yes, it will primarily effect internet retailers (but will also affect mail and phone-order.) But it is not a tax on the internet itself, internet access, network traffic, or any other such thing.
I'll not get into a discussion in this comment as to if this is a good thing or not, but it pisses me off to see it referred to as an "internet tax."
Re: FFS, it's not an "internet tax"! (Score:2)
Exactly. If you buy something in California from out of state, the vendor doesn't charge you California sales tax, and you proceed to directly use that item, you are supposed to pay use tax. That's the law; if you're buying stuff from Amazon or wherever and not paying those use-taxes you are in violation. (And yes, this means a HUGE number of people are in violation, which is sort of the point.)
All this measure does is require that vendors like Amazon collect the tax instead. Since Amazon already does al
Re: FFS, it's not an "internet tax"! (Score:5, Informative)
The US Supreme Court has already ruled on this. It all boils down to a simple fact: States cannot force companies that don't have a business presence in those states to collect and remit taxes due on sales to the residents of those states.
Taxes: Price Tag for Civilization (Score:2)
The sales tax exemption for Internet purchases made sense while Internet sales struggled to establish themselves in the economy and the culture. Like most tax reductions or exemptions, it was a temporary exception. Because those sales taxes pay for the state's operations. The state has expenses for services that support the sellers, like the actual incorporation and all kinds of protections and infrastructure, and all kinds of protections for the buyers. When the transactions enabled by those services aren'
Seriously though (Score:2)
Re:Seriously though (Score:5, Insightful)
The universal answer is the only thing that counts is where the item is being shipped. Taxes have to be paid for that locality.
Unfortunately, it isn't just at a state level.
Once you figure out which state gets the money, it would help to have some sort of file or server that sites can check to figure out how much tax to charge- sites shouldn't have to expend resources to stay on top of tax rates in all 50 states.
If it was just 50 states it would be simple. It isn't. There is a separate tax rate for every state, county, township, city, and village. This means you have to have an exact address - zip code doesn't really cut it I don't believe. There are several services that are available today that will compute tax for you, but they are expensive services that you have to pay for. Or, you can just turn all your sales processing over to Amazon who can obviously do it all now. Once you get to a certain size it makes more sense to just have your own files and staff to maintain them rather than paying someone else to do it at a higher cost.
But there is no mistaking that it is a huge problem. I know there are city/county overlaps where within a single city there are two different tax rates depending on which county you are in. Buffalo Grove, IL (used to live there) is split in two different counties (Lake and Cook) which have different tax rates. I seem to recall there being even worse problems in Ohio with townships, villages and counties all having their own tax rates and the final answer was the sum of the three for a particular address. No, there is no central authority for this - everyone that is doing nationwide sales tax collection today is either paying for a very expensive service or is doing it themselves. And it changes constantly.
My guess is that this will be a huge windfall for Amazon and a few other very large retailers that are able to offer shopping cart/purchasing services to other retailers that can't afford the services to compute the tax.
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Exactly. It would be a logistical nightmare for any but the biggest online retailers.
Those who fail to learn from history... (Score:2)
Constitutional issues aside, this does nothing but decrease the revenue of California Amazon affiliate businesses, resulting in lower tax revenues.
Taxes, a blunt instrument (Score:2)
It amazes me how much work businesses will perform to avoid taxes. It is usually on the top three questions in the vetting of any business plan
nice try (Score:2)
Move this up to fed level. (Score:3)
For fuck's sake (Score:3)
Could someone please require legislators to take a freshman level economics class?
This WILL drive business out of California. Amazon will pick the fuck up and move out of the state. The companies that don't move will be driven out of business because they can't compete with the ones who do. The SCOTUS has held that individual states don't have the right to tax entities that don't have a physical presence in that state.
This is about some know-nothing asscock wanting to stick it to "the corporations". It completely misses the fact that it will hurt people in their state.
LK
Re:Stupid Move (Score:5, Funny)
"We're Broke, what should we do?!"
"Hmm, how about we 'extend' taxes online and piss off silicone valley?"
"OK, we'll extend the taxes, but you are not urinating on my tits!"
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Silicone Valley: home of the original breast implant.
Re:Stupid Move (Score:5, Funny)
"Hmm, how about we 'extend' taxes online and piss off silicone valley?"
Silicon Valley.
Silicone Valley encompasses Hollywood, Beverly Hills, and Orange County.
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They don't need to "extend" anything. CA has laws on the books charging sales tax on anything bought outside of the state since the '30s.
It's called "Use Tax" because the fiction is that they're taxing the use of the item, not the sale. Oddly enough, the Use Tax is identical to your local sales tax rate.
They starting enforcing it for businesses about a year ago. Retroactive to 2007. California is a very business unfriendly state.
Coincidentally enough, I filed my Use Tax online for my corporation today. So i
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business would be driven out of the state very soon as investors only care about money.
I'd need to see some data before I'd conclude that was inevitable. There are already higher taxes here, cost of living is higher here and consequently worker salaries have got to be pushed up. It doesn't seem to me that you've done the calculations to where you can conclude that staying in California and paying these taxes would cost the companies more than it would to relocate somewhere else that would likely pass an internet tax sooner or later. Nor do I believe that you have a good reason why these co
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Nor do I believe that you have a good reason why these companies wouldn't just pass off the costs to consumers, as they do with any other sales tax.
Because if I, as an Internet-savvy consumer, go to the web site of company X (located in California), get to the check-out portion of the web site and see sales tax added to my purchase, I will quickly bail out of the order, go to the web site of company Y (NOT located in California) and purchase my products there. I highly doubt I would be alone in doing this, and consequently, company X will soon face an unpleasant reality: relocate to a state that doesn't make such asinine rules or lose their business t
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Sorry, but that isn't what this tax is about.
This tax is that if you, the consumer, are living in California and buy anything, anywhere the retailer has to collect California sales tax and submit it. A business located in California that you, a California resident, buy from already has to collect California sales tax and submit it.
The problem with this idea is that any operation much smaller than Amazon now has to (a) register to collect California sales taxes and (b) start collecting them. Step A is rela
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Even simpler: Don't change their process at all. Continue to sell to California residents without collecting sales tax, based on the established Supreme Court precedent.
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But what are they supposed to do? They're broke and raising taxes is apparently taboo over there, there's a limit to how much spending you can cut without severely impacting government services. Why should goods purchased over the Internet be exempt from taxes when goods purchased in a brick and mortar shop is not? Within the EU, we pay VAT in the country where the store is based, for goods purchased outside the EU, local VAT is imposed as part of import duties.
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But what are they supposed to do? They're broke and raising taxes is apparently taboo over there, there's a limit to how much spending you can cut without severely impacting government services. Why should goods purchased over the Internet be exempt from taxes when goods purchased in a brick and mortar shop is not? Within the EU, we pay VAT in the country where the store is based, for goods purchased outside the EU, local VAT is imposed as part of import duties.
[ClueStick]This IS raising taxes - on everyone in the state who buys from Amazon. Duh![/ClueStick]
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They're not really raising taxes, they're just making sure you pay the same tax online as you do in a physical store, I just don't see what's wrong with that. I also don't see anything wrong with raising taxes if needed to maintain or improve government services and ensure that everyone has the benefit of a decent life with a roof over their heads, healthcare, and an education, something that should be especially needed in the US with a minimum wage below the poverty line...
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"use taxes" -- read up on 'em.
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...that was made in another state? This is unpossible as this is out of their jurisdiction.
California already taxes items purchased out of state, even by non-residents.
I moved to California in January. When I went to register my car, they said I had to pay sales tax on the purchase. "But I bought this car 8 months before I moved to California." Doesn't matter, they still said the tax was owed, about $3K worth.
Clearly illegal, but nobody is going to spend $100K in attorney/court fees to fight $3K worth of taxation. Welcome to the People's Republic of California.
Re:nice (Score:4, Informative)
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Okay, that was a cheap shot (sorry) but while there is a lot in Europe that's pretty cool, an almost 20% sales tax certainly isn't one of them.
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So instead of California getting something like 8% of the Amazon sales in sales taxes, you'd rather CA got the income tax on the Amazon workers in CA. That would probably be something like 8% of their income [investinginbonds.com]. But what Amazon pays its workers is much less than the revenue each gets Amazon; probably a lot less than half. Even if you count the money CA saves in unemployment and related benefits, it's clear that CA's s
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You are absolutely correct. See here [slashdot.org].