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Amazon and internet sales tax.


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2012 Jan 28, 3:16pm   16,141 views  38 comments

by chanakya4773   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

I was looking at Amazon profit margin in yahoo finance and its 2%.
If the internet sales tax of ~ 8.5 % kicks in this September in CA and then possibly in other states, how can Amazon compete with the likes of Walmarts and targets given that its not sitting on a big profit margin ?
Current Low profit margin of 2% means that Amazon can only accommodate the sales tax by increasing the final prices on products.
Currently most people buy on Amazon due the the lower prices (less by approximately sales tax amount)

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14   thomas.wong1986   2012 Jan 30, 2:47pm  

Dan8267 says

Exactly. So, why should I in Florida pay Florida taxes on a purchase I make online from a warehouse in DE or WI? Florida isn't providing the police and fire protection. And shipping is done by the shipping company, not the warehouse or online store. That cost is separate

Your the end user in that state. And the transaction occured between seller and buyer from Florida not from DE or WI, point of purchase.

15   Buster   2012 Jan 30, 3:13pm  

I think Amazon should have to collect/pay sales taxes if it chooses to sell in CA, or any other store for that matter. Why should it get a huge advantage over mom and pop sellers down the street?

16   thomas.wong1986   2012 Jan 30, 5:12pm  

chanakya4773 says

I never understood that either. Is it not unfair ?

One could also ask.. whats the difference between ordering online from Amazon vs ordering from a catalog like JCPennys, Macys, and Sears who did collect sales tax as many did decades past.

17   nope   2012 Jan 30, 5:58pm  

Amazon's tax advantage is more than offset by its shipping costs in most cases.

Amazon would probably be fine even if you had to pay sales tax. I live in washington and order plenty from amazon. The convenience of being able to get just about anything ever made delivered in two days or less just can't be compared.

I recommend that everyone checks out amazon prime. I use it to buy almost everything these days.

18   zzyzzx   2012 Jan 31, 1:49am  

I buy all kinds of stuff from Amazon.com because I can't find it in the stores locally. Sales tax isn't going to make me buy it locally.

19   Dan8267   2012 Jan 31, 3:54am  

thomas.wong1986 says

Isnt that what is already happening..

Black markets can grow and will under sales taxes.

thomas.wong1986 says

Dan8267 says

Exactly. So, why should I in Florida pay Florida taxes on a purchase I make online from a warehouse in DE or WI? Florida isn't providing the police and fire protection. And shipping is done by the shipping company, not the warehouse or online store. That cost is separate

Your the end user in that state. And the transaction occured between seller and buyer from Florida not from DE or WI, point of purchase.

Then I'll be an end user in another state. It's easy to use an Internet proxy or have an item shipped to another state and then forwarded to your place.

20   TechGromit   2012 Jan 31, 5:35am  

How can Amazon compete? Well lets look at how each one works. Walmart gets items from suppliers and they all go to a central distribution center for each region of the country. The stock is then picked and shipped to Walmart stores as needed, they have to unpack and stock the shelves for consumers to buy them. Walmart has to provide lighting, music, heat (or air conditioning) to make shopping a pleasant experience. They need parking to accommodate customers cars, people to go out and rather up all the shopping carts so customers have carts to put there shopping items in. They also need cashiers to ring up the customers and bags to put the items in.

Amazon on the other hand has regional distribution centers that all the items from there suppliers go to. they don't need shopping music, often the warehouses aren't well heated or air conditioned (there was a story of several warehouses that were so hot in the summer employees were passing out. Employees that couldn't take the heat and pace were fired), there's no shopping carts to gather up or cashiers to ring up purchases. They do have a server farm and IT workers to manage them. All transaction are handled automatically by credit cards. They don't have shopping bags, but do have boxes for shipping. They also do not have 100's of store locations that they have to build, maintain, pay taxes on, etc. parking lots are also much smaller, only need enough spaces for the workers, not all there customers.

So my question is how can Walmart compete with Amazon, there overhead is WAY less.

21   Dan8267   2012 Jan 31, 6:21am  

Physical retail is dead and it should be. It is highly inefficient. And government should not protect those businesses. They are obsolete.

Even virtual retail serves little function, with Amazon being one of the few exceptions. Since most of the products we buy come from large companies, online wholesale makes the most sense. Online retail adds value for consolidating many tiny businesses in one store and that's what Amazon does.

The Internet has eliminated the need for middle men both in the entertainment distribution industry and in the physical goods retail industry. It's assine to protect obsolete business models. We should be building new infrastructure.

22   Dan8267   2012 Jan 31, 8:06am  

chanakya4773 says

well if online retail was so efficient , how come the pre sales tax price of most goods in amazon are same as that of walmarts/target..etc

By efficient, I mean it costs less by far to run an online retail store with warehouses instead of a retail chain in which you have to have a brick-n-mortar store every 20 miles or so. This is obvious and indisputable.

Whether that efficiency is passed on to you the consumer or kept as higher profit margins for the business is an entirely different matter.

Brick-n-mortar stores are a massive waste of city land, parking spaces, and gasoline. And that's not even counting the environmental consequences.

23   Dan8267   2012 Jan 31, 8:31am  

Walmart is the one of the few retail stores that is not in trouble. But, if what you say is true that retail stores in general have the same net profit margins as Amazon and other online stores, then government should definitely not try to boost brick-n-mortar stores. And all those brick-n-mortar stores should stop complaining about the competition. (They certainly do that a lot.)

24   Dan8267   2012 Jan 31, 8:43am  

What constitutes a level playing field? Brick-n-mortar stores can have an online storefront as well.

Is it an uneven playing field if the book store in Philadelphia charges 6% sales tax and the book store across the Delaware river charges 2% sales tax?

The problem with state sales tax is that they inherently create uneven playing fields when dealing with interstate commerce. The only way to make sales tax even is to either eliminate it or nationalize it. And nationalizing it is exactly what the richest 0.1% want because they could easily avoid the sales tax.

25   Dan8267   2012 Jan 31, 9:33am  

chanakya4773 says

why should we have double standards?
I pay CA sales tax if i buy a new car in Oregon and bring to CA. try arguing that.

If I buy anything in New Jersey like groceries, sun tan lotion, a computer, gasoline, etc. and bring it back to Philly, I pay NJ sales tax not Philly sales tax. The location of the store, the site of purchase, is the standard. So, by that logic, the location of the online store should determine what sales tax you pay, not the home address of the customer.

And if the primary address of the customer is what determines which state's sales tax you pay, then I'm using a Delaware PO box as my primary address.

26   SFace   2012 Jan 31, 10:25am  

Dan8267 says

If I buy anything in New Jersey like groceries, sun tan lotion, a computer, gasoline, etc. and bring it back to Philly, I pay NJ sales tax not Philly sales tax. The location of the store, the site of purchase, is the standard. So, by that logic, the location of the online store should determine what sales tax you pay, not the home address of the customer.
And if the primary address of the customer is what determines which state's sales tax you pay, then I'm using a Delaware PO box as my primary address.

Under general uniform commercial code ("UCC"), a transaction occurs when title to the good passes or payment received. In a grocery store, title passes when you pay the cashier. For Amazon, title passes when the goods are shipped and received (If the items are lost in translation, it is Amazon's lost). Focusing on the location is irrelvant as the transaction occurs in the state where title passes generally.

In the case of a car, the theory is the vehicle is used where the it is registered. the DMV makes sure the tax is paid.

27   EBGuy   2012 Jan 31, 10:36am  

From WSJ:Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster estimated that the company loses at least $11 per customer on its Prime program, which offers unlimited quick shipping to customers who pay a $79 annual fee.
Huh. That doesn't sound too efficient to me. Don't worry, once they put those 'unneeded' bricks and mortar showrooms out of business, I'm sure they'll be less sanguine about subsidizing their Prime customers.

28   SFace   2012 Jan 31, 11:01am  

EBGuy says

From WSJ:Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster estimated that the company loses at least $11 per customer on its Prime program, which offers unlimited quick shipping to customers who pay a $79 annual fee.

Prime increase sales and drive loyalty, a gateway product. If they are losing a lot, that means they are shipping a lot and making it up somewhere else. Sell more ship more.

You can split prime with four users. One account can ship to four address.

The thing they have to watch out for is selling stuff like dental floss (which we did). If a customer orders 1, they lose money on that transaction.

29   thomas.wong1986   2012 Jan 31, 12:06pm  

Dan8267 says

The problem with state sales tax is that they inherently create uneven playing fields when dealing with interstate commerce. The only way to make sales tax even is to either eliminate it or nationalize it. And nationalizing it is exactly what the richest 0.1% want because they could easily avoid the sales tax.

Some ST has layers of taxes for metro services like LA and NYC at say 1% in addition to State, County, and City. Other states have none, so it makes no sense to include one.

Different rates for different needs..
http://www.boe.ca.gov/cgi-bin/rates.cgi?LETTER=A&LIST=CITY

30   jkennedy   2012 Jan 31, 1:45pm  

When prime was only for "faster" shipping, I didn't think much of it. "Fine, I'll order $25 and wait the 6 days". However, as I've started ordering more and more, I've found it pretty useful. At $6.50 per month it's not much, and now it's offering up movies like netflix, and online cloud storage, borrowing of some kindle books. All these little side services are definitely creating some loyalty on my part.

But there are several items I wouldn't have purchased from them, had I not gotten that 8% break!

Brick and mortar stores will definitely get a big boost from this, because stores like best buy and walmart deal in impulse buys and associated buys. Buy a tv, how about $150 in cables, a blue ray player and a warranty... walmart never wanted to do online, because they often have loss leaders that people either upgraded to a slightly higher model "oh it's only $4 more for this higher end toaster.. ", or who purchased a dozen other items before leaving. Online, it's hard to get that upsale, and harder to get a dozen little items into your basket. Amazon tries, but doesn't always suceed in getting all those extra items into peoples baskets.

31   TechGromit   2012 Jan 31, 9:09pm  

Dan8267 says

Physical retail is dead and it should be. It is highly inefficient. And government should not protect those businesses. They are obsolete.

I certainly wouldn't agree with this. So if your sick and need cough medicine your going to log onto Amazon or another online retailer, order it and wait a week for delivery? I guess you could overnight it, but the cost is high and your still not getting it for at least 12 hours.

There's a lot of things people need that they want NOW! Not in a few days. Physical retailers are not dead and never will be. There may be less of them, they will probably have a smaller selection then online retailers, but they will never cease to exist... unless the technology is developed to instantly deliver products to your customers, think Star Trek transporter.

32   Dan8267   2012 Jan 31, 11:35pm  

TechGromit says

I certainly wouldn't agree with this. So if your sick and need cough medicine your going to log onto Amazon or another online retailer, order it and wait a week for delivery?

Yes, things like pharmacies and supermarkets are going to stay in business because you still go to them every week. I'm not so sure about all the mom and pop stores.

With the exception of what I buy at the local supermarket (food, toilet paper, cold medicine), I purchase just about everything online. I don't even go to the mall anymore. And I can't be the only one who shops like this.

It's like land lines. Sure some people will continue to have them, but many like me haven't had a land line since the last millennium.

http://www.youtube.com/embed/GF1b1pf9DRY

33   EBGuy   2012 Feb 1, 2:37am  

But there are several items I wouldn't have purchased from them, had I not gotten that 8% break!
I usually buy online from companies with a California presence. It makes things much easier at tax time as I don't have to save all of those receipts.

34   zzyzzx   2012 Feb 2, 12:19am  

TechGromit says

So my question is how can Walmart compete with Amazon, there overhead is WAY less

Certain things aren't viable to ship. I.E. - you aren't going to buy thing that are heavy and relatively inexpensive through the mail. Things like cat litter and soda come to mind, but there is a lot more than that that is best bought locally.

35   Dan8267   2012 Feb 2, 1:14am  

zzyzzx says

Things like cat litter and soda come to mind

It's always about the cat litter with you.

36   Vicente   2012 Feb 2, 2:11am  

EBGuy says

I usually buy online from companies with a California presence. It makes things much easier at tax time as I don't have to save all of those receipts.

You are likely a distinct MINORITY if you are reporting the tax on your out-of-state purchases. Most people evade this.

37   EBGuy   2012 Feb 2, 2:40am  

Most people evade this.
I'm shocked I tell ya... SHOCKED! So what you're telling me is that this company isn't necessarily more efficient than bricks and mortar stores, but instead has a large customer base because it allows people to easily evade sales tax that is due? Doubly shocked!

38   nope   2012 Feb 2, 2:56pm  

Physical retail is absolutely *not* dead.

It just needs to evolve.

Apple is probably the best example of retail done right. It's mostly a show room and customer service center.

Clothing stores will be needed for a long time (at least until we're able to get everything made to measure).

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