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EDITION 57 |
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Dot-com doesn't pay
by
Al Paschall
I should do more shopping on the
Internet. I’m too easily swayed
in a store. I bought this new
jacket the other day because the clerk told me I looked just like Harrison Ford
when I put it on. I hate to say she
lied, she just used extraordinary salesmanship.
I bought. Such is retailing.
Of course she and some 949,000
of her colleagues are living in dread this week.
As Pennsylvania’s retail employees they know that Thanksgiving does
bring out the turkeys and a lot of them will be shopping in their stores during
the next 6 weeks.
There are three jobs to get if
you want to see just how inhuman our species can be.
Work in a hospital emergency room, the city desk at a newspaper or behind
a retail counter. I’ve done all
three and given the choice between pushing a gurney, banging away the disasters
of the day at a keyboard or standing for 8 hours behind a counter while somebody
worries if their dog’s sitter would like pink or blue gloves I’ll take
either of the former especially since they pay slightly more than minimum wage.
And to add insult to injury in Pennsylvania we make them collect about
30% of the state’s annual revenue while their competition doesn’t have to.
Because if you buy off the Internet you don’t have to pay Pennsylvania
sales tax.
While only about 40% of
merchandise is subject to the state’s 6% sales levy it’s the big numbers
that count. Big ticket items like
jewelry, appliances and electronics have brought in a healthy $2.5 billion into
the state’s general fund just since July, $1.6 million above estimates and
$156 million more than the personal income tax.
In May of this year Congress
passed a five-year moratorium on Internet sales taxes.
When the bill reached the Senate the National Retail Association and
shopping center owners launched an all out attack on the ban. Oklahoma fashion
retailer Robert Benham said it best when he told the Wall Street Journal:
“We’re not seeking a new tax,” he said, “We are seeking a level playing
field. We are the ones who sponsor
the little league teams, buy tables at charity events and hold fashion shows to
benefit those charities. When’s
the last time a dot-com did a local charity fashion show?”
The Ridge administration agrees
with Congress. The Internet and the
dot-coms are considered growth industries and somewhere within the
administration the notion persists that if the 6% is added to dot-anything sales
then the cyberspace economy will come crashing down.
The cyberspace retail economy that doesn’t pay school taxes, doesn’t
employ 949,000 Pennsylvanians and as Mr. Benham put it so well doesn’t do
much, if anything, for local communities.
Yet if anything is going to
crash in the state, in fact the nation, it is the retail economy.
America, especially in the mid-Atlantic region has too many stores.
In categories dominated by so-called big box stores price cutting will be
great for consumers this holiday season but year end earnings will put a dent in
shareholder return. Middle market stores are struggling to find their niche
between the discounters and the dot-coms. Top
line retailers are comfortable this year but are vulnerable when times aren’t
so good. One leading economist went
so far as to predict that forgetting any recessionary tendencies half the
retailers that we have today will disappear in 5 to 7 years.
If we continue to let Internet retailers have the sales tax advantage we
can speed up that process and be left with plenty of empty, dark buildings that
won’t pay any taxes at all.
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Albert
Paschall is senior commentator for the Lincoln Institute, a non-profit
educational foundation in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Ó
Calvin-Graham Enterprises 2000. www.lincolninstitute.org
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"Some days" © Calvin-Graham Enterprises, distributed at no charge to selected newspapers in the the Commonwealth Of Pennsylvania by the Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc., 453 Springlake Road Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 17112. Receipt of distribution is permission to publish as bylined op-ed only. Not available as letter to the editor. The Lincoln Institute is a non-profit, non-partisan educational foundation dedicated to promoting the ideals of free market economics and individual liberty through the conduct of public opinion research. The opinions expressed in "Some Days" do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the institute its officers or directors. |