SHOULD INTERNET SALES BE TAXED?

AuthorLUKAS, AARON
PositionAdvisory Committee on Electronic Commerce

"A speculative revenue crisis doesn't justify giving new taxing authority to states to treat all businesses badly in the name of fairness."

SERVING on a Congressional advisory commission is a bit like being a mother-in-law--you get to criticize everyone, but no one has to listen to you. Life on the 19-member U.S. Federal Advisory Commission on Electronic Commerce (ACEC) is no exception.

The ACEC was created by Congress as part of the 1998 Internet Tax Freedom Act and was charged with studying international, Federal, state, and local tax issues pertaining to the Internet. By law, the commission needs a two-thirds majority vote to approve any recommendation. The ACEC will issue its final report in the spring of 2001, but the real purpose of the commission has already been served. It provided members of Congress and the major party presidential candidates with an excuse not to take a position on Internet taxes right now. Ultimately, it won't really matter what the report says, since Congress is notorious for ignoring its own advisors.

For the sake of argument, though, what will the commission recommend? The smart money is on either "nothing" or "everything." To be sure, there are some areas of agreement among the commission's members. They already had voted to endorse the Clinton Administration's policy of keeping the Internet a global free-trade zone, and informal polls have shown supermajority support for a recommendation that Congress repeal the three percent Federal excise tax on telecommunications services. That's where the harmony ends, however. On the most contentious Internet tax issue--the application of sales and use taxes to cross-border sales--the ACEC is split into three distinct factions: those who want no e-commerce to be taxed, those who want all e-commerce to be taxed, and those who want some e-commerce to be taxed.

The anti-taxers, represented most prominently by the ACEC chairman, Gov. James Gilmore of Virginia, want Congress to ban permanently the collection of sales and use taxes on all online commerce, local or remote. Several bills to this effect have already been introduced in Congress, including legislation by Rep. John Kasich (R.-Ohio), Sen. John McCain (R.-Ariz.), and Sen. Bob Smith (Ind.-N.H.). State and local officials warn that this approach will deplete their tax coffers and lead to the downfall of Western civilization. (I exaggerate only slightly.)

The pro-tax faction is led by Gov. Michael Leavitt of Utah and Mayor Ron Kirk of Dallas. They back a plan by the National Governors' Association that would create a centralized "trusted third party" collection system for sales taxes that would be...

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