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Just got this email from ebay...very interesting

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leatherman

Active member
Aug 7, 2008
2,303
0
The Atlanta suburbs
Tell Congress, "No New Net Taxes"

Internet Sales Taxes--Your costs go up. Your buyers' costs go up. You are required to comply with the same tax laws as the nation's largest retailers. This scenario could soon become reality.

The sales tax laws governing today's Internet and catalog retailers are simple: If you sell something to a person living in your state, you collect sales tax. If that customer doesn't live in your state, you don't collect the tax. However, a number of state governments and the biggest retail giants in America are planning an aggressive lobbying campaign to change the law. They want to require small retailers to operate like the biggest retail chains, collecting taxes everywhere.

We all know times are tough and state governments are looking for more tax money. Likewise, big retailers see an opportunity to gain a competitive edge by imposing new costs and higher prices on their smallest competitors. Luckily, the tax ground-rules can't be changed without congressional action. There's still time to stand up and be counted. If you think adding a new tax burden on small Internet retailers is a bad idea, now is the time to make your voice heard. Click here to send a letter to your U.S. Representative and Senators today.

It won't be easy. But together, Internet retailers like you can stop these new taxes.

Sincerely,

Tod Cohen
VP and Deputy General Counsel, Government Relations


Discuss.
 

smapdi

Well-known member
Aug 7, 2008
4,397
221
It's kind of funny that this letter tries to make it about an ebay seller versus Wal-mart. Wal-mart, and many other large corporations, have to file sales tax in every state because they have physical locations in every state. Just because Jim Bob's Card Shop has a grand total of 1 location, and sells a card through ebay to someone in another state and is therefore exempt from paying tax to either state is something very odd for ebay to campaign about. And most sellers, I would think, are responsible for income tax, not sales tax.

And I don't even understand this line:
Likewise, big retailers see an opportunity to gain a competitive edge by imposing new costs and higher prices on their smallest competitors.

I guess he means the big retailers support a universal sales tax since they effectively pay it already. But it's written like they would be the ones imposing it, not Congress (though with lobbyists today the line gets fuzzier). Oo-fah.

Either way, it's old news. This issue has been around pretty much forever, and while it's always floated as an idea when there are big budget deficits, it's never gotten off the ground.
 

flightposite

Active member
Aug 7, 2008
2,999
0
If the government started to get a slice of the auctions as well... Would it finally be worthless to sell on ebay?
 

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