The Wall Street
Journal is always quick to ignore the wrongs to the many to protect the
rights of the few—in this case the few being Internet merchants located in New Hampshire, a state without sales tax, who would have to collect sales
tax on items sold to people living in other states, while those undeserving New
Hampshire brick-and-mortar wholesalers would not have to collect taxes for
in-store purchases by tourists just traveling through. To ensure that this
unfair situation doesn’t come to pass, a Journal
article wants us to urge our Senators to defeat the latest attempt to make
Internet merchants collect sales tax.
The Journal
forgets that in the current situation, Internet merchants have a tremendous
advantage over brick-and-mortar stores because they don’t have to collect local
sales tax, either for the jurisdiction in which they have their official
“office,” or in the jurisdiction of the buyer. The new bill, as so many like it
that have gone down to defeat in recent years, would level the playing field
between Internet and brick-and-mortar businesses when it comes to taxation. It
would end a subtle regressive element of the current situation—rich folk are
more likely to buy on the Internet and so less likely to pay sales tax. And it would increase much needed state
revenues in virtually every state.
The Wall Street
Journal is not the only big player pushing to defeat a bill that would
require Internet merchants to collect sales tax. Over the weekend, John Donohoe, the chief executive officer of eBay, sent email missives to millions of eBay users asking them to oppose the legislation.
As usual when defending the business prerogatives of the
few, both eBay and the Journal hide
behind the patriotic flag of small business. Both want a bill that exempts
small businesses. In Donohoe’s case, that means firms with fewer than 50
employees and less than $10 million in sales.
- Donohoe appeals directly to eBay sellers: “This legislation treats you and big multi-billion dollar online retailers—such as Amazon—exactly the same. Those fighting for this change refuse to acknowledge that the burden on businesses like yours is far greater than for a big national retailer.”
- The Journal sees a conspiracy against small business: “So big business and big government are uniting to pursue their mutual interest in sticking it to the little guy. Any Internet seller with more than $1 million in annual sales would be forced to serve all of the nation's tax collectors.”
Didn’t these people ever hear of automated software or
third-party payment services such as PayPal?
Did the opponents to collecting sales tax in a consistent manner ever
think that maybe the vendors who have automated Internet purchases will also
quickly develop software that handles everything involved in collecting and
transmitting sales tax to the various taxing bodies—that is, if the software
doesn’t already exist. The technology
can’t possibly be very hard to develop, considering that industry has already
developed software that helps the little Internet merchant sell thousands of
items with constantly changing prices and specifications, just like small brick-and-mortar
merchants do.
I certainly believe that the little guy should be protected
from the predatory practices of large corporations. But that’s not what this proposed new law is
about. It’s about raising revenues in a fair and equitable manner.
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