Remote vendors and American sales and use taxation: the balance between fixing the problem and fixing the tax.: An article from: National Tax Journal
Book Details
Author(s)John L. Mikesell
PublisherNational Tax Association
ISBN / ASINB0008JAIFU
ISBN-13978B0008JAIF8
MarketplaceFrance 🇫🇷
Description
This digital document is an article from National Tax Journal, published by National Tax Association on December 1, 2000. The length of the article is 7286 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
From the author: The remote vendor problem challenges the sales tax as a revenue producer; even more critical, though, is damage to economic balance, efficiency, and fairness. Congressional relief from the physical presence rule--rendered obsolete by uncertainty about what presence means and by "click and brick" affiliates--requires no undue burden for multi-state enterprises. State adoptions of a burden-reducing common tax structure would be virtually impossible because states have substantially different shares of their tax systems at stake in the sales tax and because they start from unique sales tax structures designed for their own economies and politics. Congress could handle the problem by requiring registration for large remote vendors, but only for states affording vendor-friendly compliance (no local use taxes and reasonable collection compensation).
Citation Details
Title: Remote vendors and American sales and use taxation: the balance between fixing the problem and fixing the tax.
Author: John L. Mikesell
Publication:National Tax Journal (Refereed)
Date: December 1, 2000
Publisher: National Tax Association
Volume: 53 Issue: 4 Page: 1273
Distributed by Thomson Gale
From the author: The remote vendor problem challenges the sales tax as a revenue producer; even more critical, though, is damage to economic balance, efficiency, and fairness. Congressional relief from the physical presence rule--rendered obsolete by uncertainty about what presence means and by "click and brick" affiliates--requires no undue burden for multi-state enterprises. State adoptions of a burden-reducing common tax structure would be virtually impossible because states have substantially different shares of their tax systems at stake in the sales tax and because they start from unique sales tax structures designed for their own economies and politics. Congress could handle the problem by requiring registration for large remote vendors, but only for states affording vendor-friendly compliance (no local use taxes and reasonable collection compensation).
Citation Details
Title: Remote vendors and American sales and use taxation: the balance between fixing the problem and fixing the tax.
Author: John L. Mikesell
Publication:National Tax Journal (Refereed)
Date: December 1, 2000
Publisher: National Tax Association
Volume: 53 Issue: 4 Page: 1273
Distributed by Thomson Gale



