Marketplace Fairness Act Introduced: Expands State Internet Sales Tax Authority with Some Simplifications

Identical bills have been introduced in Congress which would grant each state the power to require collection of sales and use taxes by sellers with no physical presence in the state (PDF here). The “Marketplace Fairness Act” (S. 336 and H.R. 684) is the latest step of a lengthy and rigorous effort to expand state tax authority beyond historical limits, increase state revenue, end an economically unjustifiable tax A tax is a mandatory payment or charge collected by local, state, and national governments from individuals or businesses to cover the costs of general government services, goods, and activities. treatment disparity between brick-and-mortar retail sales and online/catalog sales, and bring about uniformity and perhaps even simplification in the nation’s byzantine sales tax system.

In a presentation I routinely give, “The History of Internet Sales Taxation: 1789 to the Present,” I explain at least seven identifiable perspectives on the issue. It’s a complex one with a lot of big players. On one hand you have the idea that state services are bound geographically and therefore so should state taxation. On the other you have justifiable outrage at consumers buying stuff online without paying tax while brick-and-mortars have to collect. Proposed solutions include origin sourcing (taxing based on the seller's location, rather than the buyer's), a national online sales tax A sales tax is levied on retail sales of goods and services and, ideally, should apply to all final consumption with few exemptions. Many governments exempt goods like groceries; base broadening, such as including groceries, could keep rates lower. A sales tax should exempt business-to-business transactions which, when taxed, cause tax pyramiding. (ugh), the status quo of course, and the approach taken by these bills – expand state tax authority in this one area while requiring significant sales tax system simplification by each state that opts to take advantage of it.

The bill mostly resembles the Senate version of the bill from the last Congress, with some changes. Below I go through what’s in the bill, and then offer suggestions about what’s not in the bill.

The bill’s requirements for state legislation:

The bill also specifies:

Things the bill does not do but could:

​Every year since 1992, advocates of expanded state sales tax authority have said that this year will be the year that they win. Past methods have included defiance and passing unconstitutional state laws, so the approach of hammering out a trade that would result in a simpler system is a welcome one. The sponsors continue to express a willingness to improve the bill. I hope it's a sincere one, as a few more improvements would be welcomed! I'm on record as predicting such a bill will pass inside of three years, but I'd like it to be a good one.