On Mon, 28 Feb 2022 18:58:20 -0500
Michael or Penny Novack wrote:
> > It's incredibly complex. And Australians have all been led to
> > believe that we have the most complex tax system on the planet.
> >
> > Liz
>
>
> The reason is that here in the US sales tax is not national. The US
> is a
It's incredibly complex. And Australians have all been led to believe
that we have the most complex tax system on the planet.
Liz
The reason is that here in the US sales tax is not national. The US is a
federation of states and commonwealths. You would not be surprised if 50
countries had
At least you have the best opera house on the planet.
On Mon, Feb 28, 2022 at 5:28 PM Liz wrote:
> On Mon, 28 Feb 2022 06:58:08 -0800
> Stan Brown wrote:
>
> > On 2022-02-28 06:34, Michael or Penny Novack wrote:
> > > But if not a remote sale, if person living in state A buys
> > > something at
On Mon, 28 Feb 2022 06:58:08 -0800
Stan Brown wrote:
> On 2022-02-28 06:34, Michael or Penny Novack wrote:
> > But if not a remote sale, if person living in state A buys
> > something at a seller in state B (and state B has sales tax)
> > collected based on that. Now the buyer might still owe sal
As soon as you dream up something that can't occur, the legislative
assistants will incorporate that scenario into new law.
On Mon, Feb 28, 2022, 09:48 Fred Bone wrote:
> On 28 February 2022 at 10:28, William Prescott said:
>
> > Sebastian,
> >
> > Just to clarify, where the "item changed hands"
On 28 February 2022 at 10:28, William Prescott said:
> Sebastian,
>
> Just to clarify, where the "item changed hands" may not be the seller's
> location. I use to live just outside the border of a city that charged a
> sales tax. When purchasing an item from a store within the city, I would
> pay
Sebastian,
Just to clarify, where the "item changed hands" may not be the seller's
location. I use to live just outside the border of a city that charged a sales
tax. When purchasing an item from a store within the city, I would pay sales
tax if I went into the store, purchased it, and took it
Thanks, guys.
Upon digging deeper, I found that there was still a balance from before I
switched it to place holder.
Bruce
On Sun, Feb 27, 2022 at 4:19 PM Steve Butler wrote:
> Look for future dated transactions. I entered some for last December and
> they ended up for next December. Happens w
Dear Bruce
Thank you for your prompt and helpful reply.
To answer your question an extract from perl -V shows :
@INC:
/etc/perl
/usr/local/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/perl/5.26.1
/usr/local/share/perl/5.26.1
/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/perl5/5.26
/usr/share/perl5
/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/perl/5
Hi Michael,
for sure, you are right.
If it's not an internet sale, then the purchase was made at the seller's
location (i.e. where the item exchanged hands) so the seller charges the
rate at their location.
Have a great day everyone.
Am 2/28/22 um 3:34 PM schrieb Michael or Penny Novack:
O
On 2022-02-28 06:34, Michael or Penny Novack wrote:
> But if not a remote sale, if person living in state A buys something at
> a seller in state B (and state B has sales tax) collected based on that.
> Now the buyer might still owe sales tax to state A when bringing the
> whatever home.
The tax
On 2/28/2022 2:50 AM, Sebastian Naumann wrote:
Hi John,
sorry, but I tend to disagree with your statement that "[...] most
states consider the location of the seller to be the nexus...".
Actually the second part of the statement is correct: Most states are
destination based, meaning the locat
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