04-26-2013 08:35 AM
I received a very official looking email this morning, supposedly from eBay, using my actual name and signed by John Dohnahoe, but it is not in my eBay messages.
"Congress is considering online sales tax legislation that is wrongheaded and unfair, and I am writing to ask for your help in telling Congress "No!" to new sales taxes and burdens for small businesses.
Whether you're a consumer who loves the incredible selection and value that small businesses provide online, or a small-business seller who relies on the Internet for your livelihood, this legislation potentially affects you. For consumers, it means more money out of your pocket when you shop online from your favorite seller or small business shop owner. For small business sellers, it means you would be required to collect sales taxes nationwide from the more than 9,600 tax jurisdictions across the U.S. You also would face the prospect of being audited by out-of-state tax collectors. That's just wrong, and an unnecessary burden on you.
Big national retailers are aggressively lobbying Congress to pass online sales tax legislation to "level the playing field" with Amazon. And, as they compete with big retail, Amazon is advocating for this legislation too, while at the same time they are seeking local tax exemptions across the country to build warehouses. This is a "big retail battle" in which small businesses and consumers have a lot to lose. But eBay is fighting, as we have for more than 15 years, to protect small online businesses and sellers and ensure healthy competition, value, and selection that benefit consumers online.
The solution is simple: if Congress passes online sales tax legislation, we believe small businesses with less than 50 employees or less than $10 million in annual out-of-state sales should be exempt from the burden of collecting sales taxes nationwide. To put that in perspective, Amazon does more than $10 million in sales every 90 minutes. So we believe this is a reasonable exemption to protect small online businesses. That's what we're fighting for, and what big companies such as Amazon are fighting against."
Of course, there was a link to click on, I missed that out in case anyone was tempted!
04-26-2013 08:47 AM
The email is legitimate and came from eBay. I also received one a few days ago.
eBay Inc (A US based corporation) is currently campaigning against the so-called "internet tax"
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2013/apr/22/ebay-internet-sales-tax-bill-amazon
In Canada, we already have a national sales tax (HST/GST) that applied on domestic transactions from businesses. As such, I find it hard to sympathize with eBay Inc on the subject, the same eBay Inc with sales of nearly one billion dollars in Canada each year yet paying no Canadian taxes.
04-26-2013 09:49 AM
Thanks Pierre, when it was not in my eBay messages, I thought it was spam.