Gov. Nathan Deal considers online sales tax for Georgia
by Walter C. Jones, Morris News Service
Jan 13, 2012 | 818 views | 0 0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Nathan Deal
Nathan Deal
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Eight states already tax electronic commerce, but most states have held off because Congress had signaled it would devise a national model to simplify the thousands of tax rates used by state and local governments.

Deal said he wasn’t content to wait on Congress.

“In the absence of congressional activity on that … I think there will be some appetite to act on that in the Legislature,” he said. “That’s still in the very, very early stages of discussion.”

Deal told the members of the Georgia Press Assoc­iation that it could be a way to replace taxes the state would give up by exempting energy factories use from sales tax, an idea he is pushing this legislative session in hopes it will lure more manufacturers.

Legislative leaders asked after Deal’s comments said they weren’t familiar with a proposal.

“It’s not something that can be easily done,” said Rep. Mickey Channell, the chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.

Federal court decisions limit how states can apply the tax, he said, adding that he favors it as a former retailer.

“It makes no sense to me to punish our brick-and-mortar merchants who pay local property taxes and provide jobs and make them charge a 7 percent higher price,” said Channell, R-Greensboro.

Rep. Ron Stephens, the chairman of the House Economic Development Committee and a Savannah Republican, also likes the idea.

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