Taxing E-Commerce in a Global Economy-Old Issues, New .ppt
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1、Taxing E-Commerce in a Global Economy: Old Issues, New Media, New Opportunities,presentation toAdvisory Commission on Electronic CommercebyPeter R. Merrill PricewaterhouseCoopers LLPWilliamsburg, VA June 22, 1999,Contents,What is e-commerce? A brief history of e-commerce Some facts and figures Tax p
2、olicy implications Suggested principles to guide tax policy,What is e-commerce?,A broad definition Interactions possessing three attributes: (1) between two computer applications, (2) completes all or part of business transaction, and (3) crosses enterprise boundaries. Includes business applications
3、 over VANs that have been used for decades Electronic data interchange (EDI) Credit card and debit card transactions Electronic fund transfers (EFT),What is e-commerce?,A narrower definition (i-commerce) Limited to business applications over open networks using non-proprietary protocols such as the
4、Internet Defined narrowly, e-commerce is barely four years old! Includes b2b applications over open networks as well as b2c applications,What is e-commerce?,Business-to-consumer (b2c) examples Retail - catalogue, configuration, sale, payment Broker, agent - auction, travel, auto, real estate Enterta
5、inment - gaming, gambling, music Communications - e-mail, e-cards, net radio Financial services - securities, insur., banking Publication - newspapers, magazines Database - directories, maps Professional services - “tele-medicine” Education - “distance learning”,History of e-commerce,Source: OECD, T
6、he Economic and Social Impact of Electronic Commerce, 1999.,History of e-commerce,E-commerce is more a way of doing business than a sector “In five years, there wont be any Internet companies because they will all be Internet companies. Otherwise, they will die.” - Andy Grove, Intel Prior changes in
7、 communications technologies also have led to evolution of business models telegraph, telephone, radio, TV, facsimile, etc.,Facts and figures U.S. i-commerce sales,B2c gets the headlines, b2b gets the dollars b2b accounts for 85%+ of sales in 1999 Much higher if we count EDI, EFT, etc. b2b is projec
8、ted to grow much faster, reaching over 90% of i-commerce by 2001 b2b migration from VANs to the Internet permits cost effective use by smaller enterprises (“EDI lite”) Source: Forrester Research Inc., Nov. 1998,Facts and figures b2c is a small share of Internet commerce,Facts and figures US direct m
9、arket sales to consumers,E-commerce is a tiny share of direct market sales Internet sales to consumers are less than 3% of all direct market sales to consumers (est. 1999) Internet sales to consumers amount to less than 4/10 of one percent of U.S. personal consumer expenditures (est. 1999),Facts and
10、 figures Internet is a tiny % of direct market consumer sales,Facts and figures,To date, Internet companies have small profitsCombined total from most recent financial statements of 15 large Internet companies:*Revenues $5.1 billionNet income $-0.4 billion*Amazon, AOL, CDnow, CompuServe, E*Trade, eB
11、ay, Excite, Infoseek, Lycos, N2K, NetGrocer, ONsale, PeaPod, Preview, Yahoo!,Facts and figures,International revenues are significant for some U.S. firms,Facts and figures,U.S. dominance of global e-commerce market is projected to decline Mid-range estimates put U.S. share of global i-commerce sales
12、 at about 80% in 1999 declining to less than 60% in 2003.Source Forrester Research Inc., 1998,Facts and figures,Facts and figures,E-commerce is contributing to U.S. economic growth by raising productivity Improved supply chain management and reduced inventory costs Reduced distribution, marketing, a
13、nd customer service costs The OECD estimates b2c commerce potentially will increase total U.S. factor productivity by 0.50%-0.67%,Tax policy implications,Dont let advocates of radical tax change use e-commerce as a pretext. Remote sales have been with us since at least the Sears & Roebuck catalog Th
14、e Internet is a tiny share of remote sales, and a negligible percentage of all consumer sales Excluding services (which generally are not subject to retail sales tax), most b2c Internet sales are delivered exactly like mail order,Tax policy implications,The tax system can cope with e-commerce. Thoug
15、h the medium is new, the issues are old. See Howley v. Whipple, 48 N.H. 487 (1869) in which the court opined that writing and signatures communicated electronically through the telegraph were equivalent to pen and ink.11See: Boyle, Peterson, Sample, Schottenstein, and Sprague, “The Emerging Internat
16、ional Tax Environment for Electronic Commerce,” Tax Management Memorandum, February 18, 1999.,Tax policy implications,Currently, tax revenue losses due to e-commerce (if any) are very small Goolsbee and Zittrain (1999) estimate that sales tax revenues are reduced by less than 1/4 of 1 percent in 199
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