[Commentary] New York Governor David Paterson has resurrected one of Eliot Spitzer's least popular ideas, a tax on Internet sales that he hopes will raise more than $70 million a year. Despised by consumers and constitutional scholars alike, this new tax will hit e-shoppers within weeks. The measure will force out-of-state retailers such as Amazon.com to collect New York's sales taxes, which approach 9%, including local levies. A 1992 Supreme Court decision called Quill bars exactly this type of money grab. The Supremes ruled that forcing such obligations on companies with no employees or buildings in a state could cripple interstate commerce. Without Quill, small Web merchants would have to answer to 7,500 state and local tax collectors. The Governor apparently believes he can get to companies like Amazon through New Yorkers who run ads for Amazon on their Web sites. In fact, if nonemployees with some business relationship with a company were enough to establish physical presence, then Quill would essentially be meaningless. The courts may well ax the tax on these grounds.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120959866791857741.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
(requires subscription)
Links to Sources
- Login or register to post comments
- Email this page
Related
- Amazon opposes Spitzer plan to tax New Yorkers for online purchases
- Albany: Spitzer Names Broadband Panel
- Spitzer Accuses Feds of Secretly Undermining his 'Payola' Case
- EMI Agrees to Fine to Resolve Payola Case
- Universal Music Settles Claims Over Radio Play
- Online Music Deals Probed
- Music Promoter to Abandon a Radio Policy He Developed
- PEJ Campaign Coverage Index: March 10 - 16, 2008
- 2nd Music Settlement by Spitzer
- New York Latest to Propose Cable, Satellite Taxes
- Music Activists Call for Payola Crackdown
- Study: More Money, More Media Coverage Lead to More Negative Political Ads
- How Amazon.com undersells Best Buy, the Apple store, and almost everybody else
- Spitzer scandal makes a perfect news storm
- Spitzer Hits Entercom With Payola Suit
Topics
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.

