Amazon.com Inc Takes Tax Fight to Supreme Court
Fresh
and interesting post from Mashable about
Amazon trying to take tax fight to Supreme Court. At issue, a
New York State law forcing online retailers to collect sales tax on
shipments to state residents:
"It
is perhaps the one remaining venue where Jeff Bezos has yet to emerge victorious:
the Supreme Court. Now, he could even prove dominant there.
Amazon
petitioned the nation’s highest court on Wednesday to hear its challenge
against a 2008 New York State law that requires online retailers to collect
sales tax. The company has hired famed Washington, D.C., attorney Ted Olson to
represent it.
The
online sales tax issue is maddeningly complex, and it is muddied even further
by the fact that Amazon has already agreed to collect sales taxes in many
states, including New Jersey and California. Bezos has also repeatedly made
plain his
support for a federal law called the Marketplace Fairness Act,
currently stalled in the House of Representatives, which would require all
online retailers to collect and remit sales tax.
To
resolve this apparent paradox — Amazon fighting and surrendering at the same
time — one must embrace a central fact: Amazon is now far more concerned with
creating a level playing field than with exploiting a sales-tax loophole. Over
the past few years, the company has undergone a dramatic transformation. It is
no longer the e-commerce upstart from Seattle shipping goods from a handful of
fulfillment centers in low-population states to all corners of the nation. Now,
it’s a retail giant with operations
in nearly every state and around 100,000 employees. It’s eventually
going to collect sales tax everywhere, and it knows it. That’s why it’s
agreeing to pay tax in many states and is supporting a federal bill to overturn
the Supreme Court’s Quill Corp. v. North Dakota decision of 1992, which ruled
that retailers without a physical presence in a state need not collect sales
tax.
So
why then is Amazon fighting in New York and petitioning the Supreme Court? The
New York law, which was among the first to tackle the online sales tax
exemption, takes a circuitous approach. It says that retailers with affiliates
in the state — those small websites, often run by hobbyists, that make extra
money by referring their readers to Amazon to buy items and then earn a
commission on the sale — must collect sales tax. (Other states have taken a far
more direct path, ruling that online retailers with physical operations in the
state must collect.)
Amazon
clearly dislikes New York’s law. It’s confusing to customers and is easily
circumventable by sellers. E-commerce startups can simply avoid authorizing any
local affiliates, and Bezos most certainly doesn’t want some wily entrepreneur
to do what he did and create the next Amazon. The company has already cut off
its affiliates in New York, as well as in Illinois, which passed similar
legislation. By getting the Supreme Court to overturn Quill Corp. v. North
Dakota, Amazon would clear the way for a new law that sets aside the size of an
online retailer and taxes all parties evenly.
So
will the supremes take the case? That’s for the court watchers to opine on, but it
certainly gets at the constitutional issues that have bedeviled the retail
world for years: The old taxation rules simply no longer apply in a world where
computers allow any company to cross every border effortlessly".
Comments
Post a Comment