http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=528&u=/ap/20040304/ap_on_hi_te/internet_sales_tax_7&printer=1

Remember all those gifts you bought online during the holidays? Now
it's time to pay sales tax on them, at least so say the income tax
forms of 20 states.


The latest to outstretch that revenue-seeking hand are New York and
California, which this year added a line requiring taxpayers to
declare any tax they owe on out-of-state purchases.


Though state revenue agencies similarly sought sales tax on mail-order
items before the e-commerce boom of the late 90s, Internet sales have
"really shined a spotlight on it and increased the urgency," said
Harley Duncan, executive director of the Federation of Tax
Administrators.


By law, residents are supposed to pay sales taxes to their states if
they order books, clothing, computers and other items by mail or
online from businesses based elsewhere.


"Nobody � very few � ever followed that rule," said Anthony Leone, a
certified public accountant in Buffalo.


The National Governors Association estimates state and local
governments will lose at least $35 billion this year from Internet
sales.


The new tax return line, New York state officials say, forces
taxpayers to confront their liability or potentially face audits that
could uncover credit card statements and mounting tax debt.


But it's unclear whether that threat is enough.


Dan DeVeronica, 21, who owns an Internet cafe in Rochester, says most
New Yorkers, including himself, will likely leave "line 56" blank "as
sort of a protest."


Though Supreme Court precedents side with the states, DeVeronica said
he was outraged New York would try to collect: "The Internet is not a
government service. It's privately owned so it shouldn't be taxable."


It looks like scofflaws need worry little.


Officials from several states said they expect few, if any, tax
returns to be audited � even if a taxpayer claims zero liability.


And so the revenues should keep trickling in.


New York tax officials are expecting the new tax line, for which
they've added seven pages of instructions and tables, to yield just
$2.5 million. Like New York, most states let taxpayers estimate their
liability based on household income.


California projects its out-of-state sales line will bring in $13
million this year � out of an estimated $1.2 billion owed by
individuals and businesses, said California Equalization Board
spokesman Vic Anderson.


"That's always a problem, making people aware of this liability,"
Anderson said. "It's one of the most misunderstood taxes out there."


New York loses more than $1 billion in sales tax revenues from
out-of-state purchases, according to a University of Tennessee study.


In Ohio, when the line was added to tax forms four years ago, 52,000
taxpayers participated. In 2002, the number dropped to 46,000, out of
5.7 million total returns, said Gary Gudmundson, a spokesman for the
Ohio tax department. The state raises about $2 million, but projects
that about $500 million goes uncollected.

States have tried other tactics, without any more success.

When Maine added the line in 1989, it also created a "default
assessment" of 0.04 percent of adjusted gross income if the line was
left blank. By 1998, the default was gone because of concerns the
system wasn't fair for taxpayers who simply forgot or didn't know the
rules, said Eileen Bemis, deputy director of the Maine Sales, Fuel and
Special Tax Division.

Without the default, Maine generated $1.3 million from the line last
year, but might be missing out on as much as $30 million a year, she
said.

"It's pretty much an honor system in that it's very difficult to go
back and audit someone's checkbook or credit card statements," Bemis
said.

Already, a New York lawmaker has introduced a bill to drop the line.

"We're going to make tax evaders out of law-abiding citizens and
policemen out of tax preparers and accountants," said Assemblyman
Ronald Tocci, a Democrat in the chamber's majority. Who, he asked,
"keeps tabs of what they buy on vacation in the Bahamas or Canada? Or
anyplace? It's crazy. It's insane."

Forty-five states require buyers to pay sales taxes on Internet and
other out-of-state purchases, though a few, including California and
Minnesota, exempt the first few hundred dollars and focus on
high-ticket items.

Meanwhile, a number of major retailers including Wal-Mart, Toys "R" Us
and Target voluntarily collect state taxes. And some states are
working on a "streamlined sales tax project" that would tax online
purchases at the point of sale. Congress would have to enact a law,
however, to make such a system nationwide.

States with sales tax lines on their tax forms include Alabama,
California, Connecticut, Idaho, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine,
Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
Rhode Island, South Carolina, Utah, Vermont, Virginia and Wisconsin,
according to the Federation of Tax Administrators.

Georgia, Hawaii and the District of Columbia have separate forms in
their income tax packages.



xponent

Texas has No State Income Tax Maru

rob


_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to