California Balks At Internet Sales Tax
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."
That is a strange tax law, this is from TFA
"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/
Pmp @ DeviantArt
Many of the servers reside in CA. In addition, so many sales. As such, CA gets to collect the sales tax on those sales. Once an internet tax comes through, then you can bet that many of the servers will change location basically to asia. Now California loses not just the tax base, but all those lucrative jobs.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
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.