10% Tax On Custom Software, $100M Tax Cut For Microsoft
reifman writes "Last week, the Washington State House of Representatives passed a bill which would impose a 10% tax on custom software while all but eliminating a $100 million yearly tax obligation that some say Microsoft is wrongfully avoiding by routing large chunks of business through an office in Nevada. 'I believe we've got an issue of justice and fairness here,' said Rep. Maralyn Chase. 'Most of the custom software purveyors are small businesses. It's a question for me of how we fairly distribute the tax burden.' 'It means that a 5 person team of entrepreneurs building a cool custom software suite, or a group of system integrators, would face a 10% tax on their services while keeping the exact same project in-house would not be taxed,' wrote Rep. Reuven Carlyle. 'It would be a massive blow to the entrepreneurial community in our state.' The bill won't become law until the House and Senate work out how best to raise another $300 million in taxes. A sales tax increase on consumers is also being considered."
This is clearly is bad for the individual geek who makes their living selling simple custom programs that do only what the user wants/needs and nothing that they don't, unlike Microsoft omnibus packages. It's a case of government by large corporation over the individual if this passes.
Actually, that's the ticket. If by custom, they mean written against a customers specifications, then it's pretty shitty. If by custom, they mean for one and only one client, then it should be pretty easy to get around. Imagine this. Company A hires you to build a custom piece of software. Once you're done, you just need to make it available for purchase to other companies. Then it's strictly not "custom" anymore, since more than one company can use it. So it all boils down to their definition of custom...
This is nothing more than a prime example of lobbyists in action. How else could you explain that the first "community" to do this contains one of the largest "non-custom" computer engineering firms in the country? I wonder what the state congressmen (or whatever they are called up there) got in return for this sweet deal... Money? Drugs? Sex? Free Computers?
If a man isn't willing to take some risk for his opinions, either his opinions are no good or he's no good
At first I thought ... "that doesn't affect me..."
This is a very common attitude that is degrading our lives in all areas in my opinion. To me, it's like playing chess and looking just one move ahead.