By Sonia Arrison TechNewsWorld
07/28/06 5:00 AM PT
Taxing digital downloads and VoIP are quick fixes that will have long-term repercussions for the technology sector, and will unfairly burden both businesses and consumers with the consequences of government failure.
Tech Industry Paper - Finding Strength Through Customer Service Poised to capitalize on an upturn in the economy, technology companies are focused on retention & service. This paper, from Convergys, provides the latest research on customer experience for B2B & B2C technology customers. Learn more.
Last month, the U.S. Treasury Department announced the end of the ancient federal excise tax (FET) on long-distance telephone bills. Consumers should be wary of this seemingly positive development, as cash-strapped bureaucrats now press forward with plans for new technology taxes, threatening innovation.
One of the most ambitious schemes is the Streamlined Sales Tax Project (SSTP), a national effort by state legislators and local tax officials to cash in on the billion-dollar Internet economy. SSTP seeks to bypass a 1992 U.S. Supreme Court decision that ruled that states cannot require out-of-state companies to collect taxes without an in-state "nexus" or physical presence. By promoting uniform tax standards across states, SSTP officials are hoping Congress will step in and disband the nexus requirement for tax collection, a move that would be disastrous for both businesses and consumers.
Bad for Small Business
If Congress eliminates the nexus requirement, online vendors will be responsible for collecting and remitting sales taxes for more than 700 different tax jurisdictions, massively raising the entry costs to operate an e-commerce business. This regulatory burden would surely push out small e-businesses and entrepreneurs, who can't afford the necessary accountants and tax planners to comply with rising red tape. What's worse, by expanding the reach of local tax collectors across the country, SSTP makes new tax burdens more likely, such as an "iPod tax" on digital goods (music and video files), made popular by Apple's (Nasdaq: AAPL) iPod media player.
Already, 15 states and the District of Columbia levy taxes on digital goods, and more may be on the way. Earlier this year, New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine called for a new iPod tax to help balance the state budget, and Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle pushed for one in 2005. Though raising millions in tax revenue may be tempting for politicians, empowering bureaucrats to tax the frontier of technology stuffs a "poison pill" down the throat of e-commerce, raising retail prices, encouraging cutbacks on consumer services, and squeezing out small businesses, reducing marketplace competition. A good example of how government officials can twist the tech sector into their personal ATM is the Federal Communication Commission's erroneous "telecom tax."
At issue is a federal technology subsidy known as the Universal Service Fund (USF), which was supposed to ensure affordable telephone service for every American, but has instead become a wasteful program. Under the direction of the FCC, unaccountable USF bureaucrats levy a telecom tax on telephone companies to give away billions of dollars in subsidies to mostly small rural carriers and classroom technology vendors who are prone to inflating business costs for financial gain. Lacking proper public oversight and accountability, USF has allowed regulators to wield their power like a teenager with a credit card, recklessly spending public funds to subsidize program abuse.
Out of Control
As USF disbursements have spiraled out of control, the FCC has been pressed to triple the telecom tax rate in the last eight years, raiding more than US$48 billion of industry profits throughout the Fund's lifetime. Now, with an expected shortfall in USF coffers, the FCC has announced it will begin taxing Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) service providers this summer, prompting companies to raise rates and tack on new recovery fees to monthly consumer bills.
Taxing digital downloads and VoIP are quick fixes that will have long-term repercussions for the technology sector, and unfairly burden both businesses and consumers with the consequences of government failure. Irresponsible bureaucrats should not be rewarded with access to more industry profits or consumer cash. Rather than perpetually shaking down businesses and consumers, responsible lawmakers should promote fiscal discipline and call for a ban on iPod taxes and all other tech taxes.
The future of technology requires an innovative and dynamic marketplace free of government meddling. The role of the tech sector is to provide consumers with cutting-edge products, not to serve as a cash cow for insolvent public institutions. As we enter a new era of high-tech innovation, consumers should be cautious of stealth designs for a new technology tax man in America.
Sonia Arrison, a TechNewsWorld columnist, is director of Technology Studies at the California-based Pacific Research Institute.
The Most Secure Laptop, Intel Strikes Back and HP Hits the 'Spot' July 24, 2006
Intel's long term success or failure may now have more to do with how well it can articulate the benefits associated with its new products. This remains a problem for all vendors in the segment as we move to the second half of the year. Good marketing has often been hard to come by.
Related Stories
Don't Tax My iPod April 15, 2005
Brewing in almost complete obscurity over the past couple of years is a scheme called the State Simplification Tax Project (SSTP). The name alone should make Americans shudder as they realize the plan aims to make it easier for red-tape mandarins to drain more tax dollars out of an already over-taxed population.
India to Tax US Outsourcing Firms October 05, 2004
As the Indian and U.S. economies become increasingly interdependent, changes in the business tax system of one country will increasingly impact businesses and consumers in the other country. This new Indian tax rule, which could be applied retroactively, appears to circumvent the Indian Finance Ministry's previous granting of income and sales tax exemptions for 10 years.
Outsourcing Could Be Affected by Indian Tax August 03, 2004
Regardless of which tax schemes are ultimately implemented, these moves by what Indians refer to as "the Centre" are leading to reassessments of global strategies by both clients and competitors of India's growing IT sector. Even if top officials in India's ruling coalition government act decisively to delay the implementation of new taxes, the confidence that India enjoys as a preferred offshore destination will be impacted.
Related News Alerts
More by Sonia Arrison
How to Solve the Net Neutrality Issue October 28, 2009
Regulation by the U.S. government is not the way to keep the Internet neutral. A better approach would be self-regulation. Now is the time for ISPs to support an independent, private body to monitor neutrality issues and forestall the possibility of the FCC "managing competition" on the Internet.
FCC's Genachowski Not Neutral on New Net Rules September 30, 2009
The proponents of Net neutrality say it's necessary for a free and open Internet, but history doesn't support that argument. The Telecommunications Act of 1996, for example, was supposed to bolster competition. Instead, by compelling companies to share their infrastructures, it reduced incentives for improvement. In the long run, it failed.
What Has President Obama Done for Silicon Valley? August 28, 2009
President Obama's appointments of Silicon Valley outsiders were only the first indications that his administration would be less than friendly to the high-tech industry, despite campaign promises. Since then, it has shown an inclination toward tight regulatory practices and away from transparency.