Story originally appeared on the Detroit News.
Lansing
— Michigan lawmakers are pushing measures aimed at going after the
hundreds of millions of dollars in outstanding taxes each year from
sales over the Internet, but they may have to wait for a federal measure
to pass for the dollars to really start rolling into the state.
Under
bipartisan bills being debated in the state House, Internet retailers
like Amazon or eBay would have to charge sales tax if they have
distribution centers or warehouses in Michigan or are affiliated with
in-state businesses whose websites steer customers to the larger
retailer.
Supporters — like the Michigan Retailers Association —
say the bills taken up by the House Tax Policy committee will bring in
revenue and help level the playing field for local businesses that must
collect sales taxes.
But Michigan's Treasury Department, while
supporting the bills, estimates that the proposed law won't generate
much revenue — unless the federal government takes action.
The
U.S. Senate is expected to vote on legislation this week that would give
states power to compel online retailers to collect state and local
taxes for purchases made over the Internet.
States now can only
require stores to collect taxes if the store has a physical presence in
the state. Consumers are supposed to declare all remote sales — which
includes items bought over the phone and on the Internet — when they
complete tax returns and pay a 6 percent use tax. But since that isn't
enforced, it rarely happens.
Tom Scott, spokesman for the
Michigan Retailers Association, said the competitive advantage for
online retailers hurts brick-and-mortar business' cash registers every
week.
"This is a huge challenge for them," he said.
The
Treasury Department estimates that $460 million in taxes from remote
sales is due in Michigan this fiscal year and most of that will go
uncollected.
While Michigan's proposed law would allow some of
that to be collected, it doesn't apply to all Internet retailers and
they can get around the law by breaking ties with their in-state
partners or moving their warehouses to other states, House Fiscal Agency
said in its analysis.
Scott said that while the bill won't bring
in all of the uncollected revenue, it would require some of the largest
online retailers, like Amazon, to start charging sales tax, which could
have a huge impact on the state's small businesses.
Even if federal legislation gets through the U.S. Senate this week, it likely has a long road ahead of it in the House.
"Everybody
would like a federal solution, but we can't sit around and wait. We
have to start doing something as a state," said Republican Rep. Eileen
Kowall of White Lake, who is sponsoring one of the bills.
Other
states like New York and Illinois have passed similar legislation.
Kowall said that if more states follow, it will encourage Congress to
finish the job.
Republican Gov. Rick Snyder has also called on
Congress to take action. In a letter to the U.S. Senate last year,
Snyder said "it's time for Congress to grant states the authority to
enforce sales tax and use laws on all retailers in their state."
Others
contend that the Michigan legislation could hurt the affiliate
marketers, the small online-based businesses that have advertising
agreements with larger Internet retailers, like Amazon.
Under the
bills as introduced, online retailers would have to charge sales tax if
they advertise on websites owned by these in-state businesses, said
Rebecca Madigan, executive director of the Performance Marketing
Association.
In states where similar legislation has passed,
Internet retailers have cut advertising relationships with these
businesses to avoid collecting the tax, which in-turn hurts those
businesses, she said.
But James Hallan, president and CEO of the
Michigan Retailers Association, said in his written testimony to the
committee that "in other states where affiliates have been terminated by
Internet-only retailers, like Amazon and Overstock, the companies have
often reinstated those agreements."
The Michigan bill is likely to advance soon to the House floor.
Republican
Rep. Jeff Farrington of Utica, chairman of the Tax Policy Committee,
said it has broad support in the committee and members plan to vote on
it in two weeks.
Majority Republicans in the House have suggested
that they may want to see action on the issue this year. Their
legislative agenda for this session includes closing the Internet tax
loophole.
Scott said it is far from certain that the U.S. House
will take up the measure once it passes the Senate and — if it does — it
likely won't be for a while. In the meantime, Michigan must ease the
burden on brick-and-mortar businesses, he said.
"It ends up
costing them sales it ends up costing our state jobs and the problem
keeps getting worse," Scott said, "which is why we are going to get
action, it's just a matter of how soon."