and other Oregon people.
What I've heard from border towns such as Vancouver WA, Yakima, Umatilla, etc. is to work in Washington where there is no income tax, and shop in Oregon where there is no sales tax. I don't even live close, but there is a factor that may portend for the rest of us. I've heard that there really IS a sales tax in Oregon, it is just simply not assessed as an "add-on." In other words, the retailer still has to pay a percent of his sales to the state, even though he is not allowed to charge sales tax as an "add on." The effect is the retailer has to charge more for his product, or if the market won't bear the additional increase, he just goes broke. Thus it is possible that a product sold in another state may add a sales tax and still be cheaper than buying in Oregon.
How is this meaningful to the rest of us? Consider internet sales, TWICE upheld by the US Supreme Court as tax exempt for sellers who have no "physical presence" in the same state as the buyer. Hypothetically, if I were to buy online $5000 worth of consumer products from a vendor in Portland, OR: could this vendor report his sale with this percent additive removed from the sale? or would he be obligated to sell to me at full-up price even though I am out-of-state?
Keep in mind that as a Tennessee resident, I am obligated by law (even as a consumer) to remit to MY state some 9.5% sales tax for products imported into Tennessee from outside the state where TN tax was not charged. (Incidentally, no one does this, but the law exists notwithstanding, and the same situation exists in neighboring states)
This has turned into a long post, and I still wonder if I have been clear. But do with this what you can...Thanks.
What I've heard from border towns such as Vancouver WA, Yakima, Umatilla, etc. is to work in Washington where there is no income tax, and shop in Oregon where there is no sales tax. I don't even live close, but there is a factor that may portend for the rest of us. I've heard that there really IS a sales tax in Oregon, it is just simply not assessed as an "add-on." In other words, the retailer still has to pay a percent of his sales to the state, even though he is not allowed to charge sales tax as an "add on." The effect is the retailer has to charge more for his product, or if the market won't bear the additional increase, he just goes broke. Thus it is possible that a product sold in another state may add a sales tax and still be cheaper than buying in Oregon.
How is this meaningful to the rest of us? Consider internet sales, TWICE upheld by the US Supreme Court as tax exempt for sellers who have no "physical presence" in the same state as the buyer. Hypothetically, if I were to buy online $5000 worth of consumer products from a vendor in Portland, OR: could this vendor report his sale with this percent additive removed from the sale? or would he be obligated to sell to me at full-up price even though I am out-of-state?
Keep in mind that as a Tennessee resident, I am obligated by law (even as a consumer) to remit to MY state some 9.5% sales tax for products imported into Tennessee from outside the state where TN tax was not charged. (Incidentally, no one does this, but the law exists notwithstanding, and the same situation exists in neighboring states)
This has turned into a long post, and I still wonder if I have been clear. But do with this what you can...Thanks.
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