CCIA’s Objections To Another Online Sales Tax Bill
10/12/2011
The Computer & Communications Industry
Association opposes the Marketplace Equity Act, a new bill introduced today by
Rep. Steve Womack, R-Ark., and Rep. Jackie Speier, Calif., that would allow
states that have fulfilled certain simplification requirements to require
out-of-state retailers to collect sales and use taxes on purchases made to
residents of their states -- regardless of physical presence.
Despite efforts to simplify the thousands of sales
tax codes that currently exist, this bill still imposes burdens that make it
difficult for small Internet retailers to compete with large brick-and-mortar
stores.
The following statement can be attributed to CCIA
President & CEO Ed Black:
“E-commerce has enabled businesses to broaden the
scope of their activities beyond traditional geographic limitations. It
is neither fair nor equitable to negate their achievements and force them to
conform to a brick-and-mortar tax system. Saddling online companies with tax
collection duties may be a convenient way for state governments to get at
revenue, but penalizing businesses for utilizing technology and innovation
would be a shortsighted targeting of new revenue models, while protecting
existing business models at the expense of consumers and growth.
“Rather than such an unjustified and myopic
approach, CCIA hopes that Congress instead takes the approach of H. Res. 95,
sponsored by Rep. Dan Lungren, R-Calif., and Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., with
30 co-sponsors, which opposes imposing burdensome or unfair tax collecting
requirements on small online businesses.”