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Amazon Terminates Illinois Affiliates (directmatchmedia.com)
91 points by skitzzo on March 11, 2011 | hide | past | favorite | 89 comments



I just received my termination email.

I believe I have a whopping $4 owed to me at this point, so I'm not upset about losing a large amount of revenue; I just have a difficult time understanding the rationale here.

I'm an affiliate: I direct traffic to Amazon, nothing more. Or put another way, I'm a third-party marketing arm; I don't participate in purchases as either buyer or seller. But apparently, I'm involved enough to constitute a physical presence for Amazon in Illinois?

If I apply this same logic to out-of-state companies contracting with marketing firms here in Illinois to promote their brand here and elsewhere, I get even more confused about the message being sent.

Perhaps it's best if I don't think about it very hard.


Might be better yet to send a strongly worded letter to your statehouse rep.


Won't work, Wal-Mart probably already bought everyone in Springfield.


Ha. True. But not writing a letter also won't work. Sooner or later we're going to have to take the damn country back, you know.


You're writing letters and lobbies are writing checks. Who in this equation carries weight?


Hey man no politician in Illinois has ever been bought off. I'm sure this law passed strictly because the representatives in Springfield felt it was the best thing for the state, and definitely not because Walmart made a $25,000 campaign contribution.


It's sad that pittances like these ($25K) influence (direct?) decisions that then divert hundreds of millions or billions.


In all honesty, the pittance is just a token, an indication that everybody is on the same page. The real compensation is that there are lots of sub rosa benefits to the politician during their time in the statehouse or Congress or what have you, and as soon as he or she has had enough of public service, there's always going to be an extremely well-paid consultancy waiting. You have to look at the overall career path.


The message being sent is simple; Amazon is receiving an unfair competitive advantage by not paying taxes (all their prices can be lower), and the legislature is trying to figure out some way they can "force" Amazon to have a local presence through people like you. Amazon, being the 800-lb gorilla they are, just said the equivalent of, "I'm taking my ball and going home."

They did this because you were the "arm" of Amazon the legislature was trying to attack. In Amazon's eyes, it's easier just to cut off that arm than to try to support it and pay higher fees.


> Amazon is receiving an unfair competitive advantage by not paying taxes...

I don't understand this reasoning. They have to pay a shipping tax -- that is, regardless of the price of the item, the buyer is going to have to have it shipped to their home. If Amazon's offering free shipping, that just means they're choosing to absorb the cost, which eliminates a competitive advantage; if the buyer pays shipping, then that increases the total cost of the item, and again, that eliminates Amazon's competitive advantage.

I don't think this has anything to do with unfair competitive advantages, and everything to do with states simply looking for ways to grab more tax revenue ... so that they can turn around and offer it as cuts to other businesses, of course.


> They have to pay a shipping tax ... that eliminates Amazon's competitive advantage.

Not really because Illinois based businesses have to ship their goods into the state as well and then have their customers pay Illinois sales tax on top of the shipping cost reflected in the sales markup.


Those costs are usually absorbed by the wholesaler, not the retailer.


Here is an explanation.

Residents of Illinois owe sales tax on their purchases. The state knows that people won't choose to pay this, so the state makes merchants collect the tax. If the merchants are based in the state, the courts say the state can do this. If the merchants are not based in the state, then the courts have ruled this to be interstate commerce, which is something that only the federal government has power over, and therefore the states can't do it. (The issue is hardly new. It was settled over a century ago with catalog companies.)

Note that the tax is theoretically owed by the residents of the state regardless of where the merchant is. But in practice people wind up paying the tax at Walmart, and not at Amazon. Which gives Amazon an advantage.


Amazon sells Item X for $19.99. An Illinois retailer sells the same Item X, also for $19.99.

Your claim is that the buyer will purchase from Amazon because there is no sales tax:

Amazon: $19.99 Retailer: $21.24

Except, the item must be shipped from Amazon to the customer. If customer pays shipping, then:

Amazon: $24.99 Retailer: $21.24

If Amazon pays the shipping, then the shipping costs must be deducted from their profit on the item, further reducing their margin. If there's enough margin at $19.99 to make this feasible, then the retailer might choose to sell the item for just $1 less than Amazon:

Amazon: $19.99, shipped. Retailer: $20.18.

I don't see the unfair advantage here. To me, it looks like Amazon has the exact same advantage that any warehouse retailer has: lower overhead and (massively) larger volume, which allows them to operate on smaller margins. That is an advantage, but it is not an unfair one.

In case I'm still not making sense, let me try one other approach: because Amazon must pay to ship items from their warehouses to the items' points of destination, does that mean that in-state warehouse retailers have an unfair advantage? Should we start levying a "shipping tax" on any in-state retailer that does not have to pay to ship their merchandise to the customer? If not, then how is this different from attempting to tax e-retailers, in the context of "unfair advantage"?

Again, I can see this being a revenue issue for states. I so far do not see it as an unfair advantage issue.


You forget that the retailer has several additional costs that you have not considered. The warehouse retailer has to transport goods, run the store, and (very importantly) has to maintain much higher stocks of each product in their stores to guarantee that, no matter which store a customer goes to, the popular item is present. (Do not underestimate the value of this factor. Volume retailers of all kinds are incredibly focused on reducing the turnaround time from when goods are purchased to profits realized from the sale.)

On the whole the advantage is definitely with Amazon, as can be verified from the prices for end consumers.

Now we get the question of fairness. People often argue about fairness as if it was an absolute fact. It is not. Fairness is a subjective opinion. Rather than trying to argue about what is fair or not fair, the best you can do is to try to understand other people's point of view.

There is a point of view from which Amazon is inducing Illinois residents to break Illinois law, and spend their money in a way that creates no Illinois jobs. Every piece of this hurts Illinois, and is not fair to companies that are forced to abide by Illinois law. You clearly do not share this point of view, but is it that hard to accept this mindset?

By contrast your point of view seems to be that Amazon is obeying US law, and it isn't Amazon's problem if Illinois wishes to foist stupid rules on its people that the people don't want to follow. That's a fair opinion, but having that opinion should not prevent you from understanding that there are other points of view out there.


That's actually not my opinion at all, but I don't know how to state my opinion any more clearly than I already have.


So the fundamental problem is that Illinois has passed a law which a large number of their citizens feel is unjust and which they break whenever they have the opportunity?

Seems like out of control politicians are the real problem here.


"advantage" != "unfair advantage"


The reason why this is seen by some as unfair is because Amazon's advantage comes from making it easy for Illinois residents to break Illinois laws. If Illinois residents weren't willing to break Illinois laws, then Amazon would have no advantage.


What these government numbskulls don't seem to understand is that what Amazon is doing isn't fundamentally any different from what Sears was doing over a century ago with their mail-order catalog.

Amazon it's receiving an "unfair" anything, they are operating well within the law and long established acceptable business practices. Politicians are just being greedy, plain and simple.


Operating within the law doesn't imply something is fair - especially when we are talking about a law change.

I think that the law should fairly target mail-order companies as well as Internet-order companies.

Of course, levying taxes based on where the buyer lives makes things difficult for the seller in terms of compliance costs; I think the best solution would be for the federal government (or even organisations like the WTO) to request that jurisdictions provide a register of who taxes should be paid to, and enough information to automate tax payments, by geographic region. The private sector could do this, but a government or International Organisation backed solution might see more participation in the scheme by tax jurisdictions.


An International Organisation to keep track of taxes owed on internet purchases?

Who is in charge of that?

What sort of conflict resolution would exist if one disagrees with the tax owed?

Just suggest a world emperor and be done with it.


Amazon in France pays sales tax, just like everybody. Sales tax in France is 20% (19,6% to be precise). Is that a problem for Amazon in France? It doesn't seem so.

I can't find a justification why online retailers should be exempt from sales tax; the reason invoked by Amazon US is that sales tax are a local tax, at the state level, and they happen to be located in a different state (they're always in a different state).

This reasoning is preposterous; the sales happens where the customer is, and that's where the tax is due. That's what will happen eventually; they are just buying time -- and not very elegantly.


It's not that the purchase is exempt from tax, it's that Amazon isn't responsible for collecting it. The onus falls on the consumer to pay the sales tax directly to the state. Nobody does though, which is why they want Amazon to collect it.

If you're looking for justification, refer to the Supreme Court ruling that established it, which said that requiring these companies to comply with the varied sales tax rules and regulations of 45 states and some 7,500 different local taxing jurisdictions would burden interstate commerce.


Why don't they fight in court then?

Cutting their affiliates lose looks really low; they should stand for them instead.


Perhaps because fighting in court is costly and long, while asking your affiliates to petition their representatives to change law may be cheaper and quicker? And suggesting to the representatives jobs will be lost (still a big no-no in today's post-crisis mentality)?

Never mind the tax paid to the state actually goes into improvement of local infrastructure, services etc.


They probably will. They already have in other states.

http://techcrunch.com/2009/01/13/new-york-court-dismisses-am...

I'm not a lawyer, but I believe they cannot file a lawsuit until they are actually harmed (i.e., after the law takes effect).



Amazon's competitors in France also pay tax. That's the difference.

The issue here is that the law is such that out of state vendors don't have to pay tax; Illinois is just trying to jigger a way to make Amazon have to pay anyway, because Amazon sells lots of stuff and they'd like the tax revenue. But that effectively gives their competitors a 10% pricing advantage, not to mention making accounting much more expensive.


Well, to be fair to the physical retailers, all online retailers should pay sales tax since you are giving them a 10% pricing advantage otherwise.

Amazon (and others) are exploiting a tax loophole, and the state governments are trying to stop that. They should, however, make such rules for all retailers, and not target Amazon specifically (I am not sure if they are doing so, but the parent comment makes it seem like that).


You're making a big assumption, that it's Amazon that's exploiting a loophole, rather than the the State being exploitative. You're assuming that the State has some inherent right to grab whatever money it can get its hands on. Can you explain why a retailer that's not in the state ought to be on the hook for these taxes?

In other words, rather than simply assuming that states have essentially unlimited authority to tax (subject to their courts and legislatures), is there a point where the authority to tax ends? At one extreme, I would submit that they can't tax me, sitting here in NJ. (However, I once had the State of Connecticut contact me, forcing me to prove to them that I didn't need to pay them income tax, so it appears to me that States do believe that their power is unlimited). On the other hand, few would argue that, say, a local shop ought to be exempt. Where do we draw the line?


Technically, it's the customer who is cheating the state. If I was to buy a product on amazon and not pay sales tax on it, I am supposed to pay a use tax on it at the end of the year.


How so? If I go to New Jersey/France/Mars and buy a candy bar, my home state has no business adding a sales tax. If I write a letter ordering a candy bar delivered from New Jersey/France/Mars, they have no business adding a sales tax. So why tax an order made online from out-of-state? The state is overreaching it's bounds, and that's why Amazon's letter says it is unconstitutional.


No, read the damn paper..Illinois is bankrupt they are asking for sales taxes to get them out of debt..


Illinois should cut its spending.


Even if that spending is money they are contractually obligated to pay based on contracts they made years ago?


Taxpayers aren't prisoners, so there is some maximum rate you can get out of people before they start leaving. I doubt it's the case, but there is a non-zero chance that paying all their obligations are actually impossible.

It's interesting enforcing contracts when my local government can sign a contract that we'll pay pensions for the next 40 years in exchange for a service now (say education), but I can move away after consuming it (or simply never become productive and pay taxes).


Yes, the taxpayers can leave. But on the other side are the people providing the service with whom the government has made these contracts.

Some people took these positions based on the deferred compensation. If that goes away, there will need to be upfront compensation. If neither of those happen you won't find many qualified people willing to take those jobs. Both sides will get screwed.


I can't find a justification why online retailers should be exempt from sales tax;

This justification is to be found in the US Constitution where authority over interstate commerce is granted to Congress. This leaves states with no legal authority over interstate commerce.

This reasoning is preposterous; the sales happens where the customer is, and that's where the tax is due. That's what will happen eventually; they are just buying time -- and not very elegantly.

In theory, yes. In practice, no.

Experience says that people don't voluntarily report or pay taxes on those sales to the state government. Furthermore state governments have proven unable to track down those sales without the cooperation of merchants. So if Amazon doesn't cooperate, those taxes don't get collected.


The issue is that Illinois has no right to issue laws governing the actions of people not located in Illinois.

Illinois is free to demand that people who are located in Illinois pay sales taxes on their out of state purchases. If it has probable cause for believing one of it's citizens is evading taxes, it can even file a subpoena with Amazon for sales records.


I disagree. Consider the following sequence of examples:

1. I have a store in Oregon, a US state with no sales tax. You live in France, and while on vacation here, you buy a trinket, and carry it home in your luggage. Clearly, I don't have to pay French sales tax. You might owe some import duty when you bring it home.

2. Suppose instead that the trinket is big and heavy, so rather than putting it in your luggage, you have me mail it to you. Its still pretty clear I shouldn't have to pay French sales tax.

3. When you get home, you like the trinket so much, you want a second one. You know that your cousin will be visiting the area, so you give her money, she gives it to me, and I mail you the second trinket. You probably still agree I don't have to pay French sales tax.

4. Suppose your cousin, and nobody you knew, was going to be near my store. So instead you hire an agent to deliver me the money instead. Now perhaps its starting to get a bit murky, but I don't see that the agent is morally different from your cousin, and the use of an agent should not avail me to French sales tax liability.

If that agent is named "the postoffice", then what we have is a typical mail-order business. And I think you can make a good case that online business should be treated a lot like mail-order business.

* * *

Now if we repeat those examples with my store in California and you in New York, there are two differences. First, California has sales tax, so in the first example, California sales tax would unquestionably be owed. Second, at some point along the way to the last example, we became engaged in inter-state commerce. The United States constitution forbids states from regulating inter-state commerce. This has been construed to mean that mail-order business is interstate commerce, and as such, neither the state of the seller nor the state of the buyer have a right to impose sales tax. Online business has, correctly I believe, been treated the same as mail-order. Most states have a "use tax", which requires a tax be paid on new goods brought into the state for use in the state. The problem is out of state sellers can't legally be required to collect it, or even report enough details for the state to reasonably enforce it.

Legal issues aside, allowing inter-state commerce to be used as a sales tax evasion scheme doesn't seem like good public policy. But the obvious fix - collecting sales tax for the locale of the buyer - is not logistically simple: states, counties and cities can all impose their own sales tax, so across the country there are thousands of different government authorities to which sales tax must be remitted and thousands of different tax rates which are constantly changing. Requiring every online seller to keep track of that - and exposing them to audit liability from all these different authorities, would not be beneficial to public policy either.


5. Suppose you get so many orders from France that you figure it makes more sense logistically to bulk ship items to a central location in France and then drop ship from there with the French office merely acting as a forwarding location. Surely this is roughly equivalent to the previous scenario.

6. Since demand from France is fairly predictable, you figure you can actually ship based on anticipated sales, shortening fulfillment time. Surely this is roughly equivalent to the previous scenario.

7. Since you realize the drop ship location is fairly close to many of your customers, you can offer a saving to the customer by allowing them to physically travel to the warehouse and collect their goods. Surely this is roughly equivalent to the previous scenario.

8. Since customers are frequently coming to pick up their orders, you realize you can neatly and logically order the items in your warehouse to facilitate easy retrieval of pickup orders. Surely this is roughly equivalent to the previous scenario.

9. Since people are coming into the warehouse, it makes no sense to force them to do the purchasing online when they could just wander through the warehouse, decide what they want and purchase right there and then. Surely this is roughly equivalent to the previous scenario.

10. Suppose you now figure out that it makes sense to advertise this warehouse space since people in the surrounding area could come in, wander through the aisles and make impulse purchases. Also, investing money in improving the physical appearance of the warehouse will also draw people in. Surely this is roughly equivalent to the previous scenario.

11. You figure out that it makes sense to place multiple warehouses in different places around the country since this will attract more people from that local area. Surely this is roughly equivalent to the previous scenario.

12. Given how logistically complicated this has become, you hire an entire French team who operate largely independently of the US parent office and manage the roll out of these fulfillment centers (they call them le store). Surely, but surely, this is roughly equivalent to the previous scenario!


5 is different from 4, because your agents in 5 are located in France. Thus, they must obey French law. Further, they are consuming French services (police, roads, fire), so it makes sense to tax them to pay for such services.

(This isn't getting into the question of whether your taxes are really buying those services (in the US, they are mostly redistributed to other people), but that's a separate matter.)


Congratulations, you've invented the slippery slope.


The vendor never has to "pay" any sales tax: they collect it (my initial wording was wrong).

It's the buyer who has to pay sales tax. Being French, if I buy anything anywhere in the world, I owe the French government 20% of the amount of that purchase; if I'm able to hide my purchase in my suitcase, then I'm evading taxes, but I'm certainly never exempt.

The crux of the matter is whether Amazon is an "out of state seller": is it? When an Illinois resident buys something from Amazon from the comfort of their own home in Illinois, they are not importing something from another state.

Amazon contends they are, though; they may have a case but I very much believe they will lose in the end.


> if I buy anything anywhere in the world, I owe the French government 20% of the amount of that purchase; if I'm able to hide my purchase in my suitcase, then I'm evading taxes, but I'm certainly never exempt.

You are not evading the system, there is an exception:

http://www.douane.gouv.fr/page.asp?id=533

Sont exonérés de la TVA [...] les biens contenus dans les bagages personnels des voyageurs en provenance de pays extérieurs à l’Union européenne.

(Goods contained in personal luggages of travelers coming from a non-EU country are exempted from VAT.)


When an Illinois resident buys something from Amazon from the comfort of their own home in Illinois, they are not importing something from another state.

Yes, legally they are. That is exactly what they're doing. We don't call it imports simply because we have a federal law that prohibits any non-federal regulation of interstate trade (i.e., imports) and there is no such law beyond the boundaries of the United States, but there's a reason we're called the United States. In an important sense, we're 50 different countries that have delegated most of their law to a federation.


In the United States, the vendor always pays the sales tax. Its customary for the vendor to itemize it separately on their customer's bill and exclude it from listed prices, but its the vendor who has to write a check to the government, the vendor who has reporting obligations to the tax authorities, and the vendor who gets in trouble if it isn't paid. I suspect its the same in France, but I don't really know.


The vendor collects the sales tax from the customer, and then (a month later) reports it to the government and pays the government back; but the only sales taxes that a vendor owes are the ones it has collected (or, in case of a dispute with the govt, the ones it is assumed to have collected).

If for example a customer buys but does not pay, then the sales tax associated with that purchase is not owed.


By that logic, it's certainly fair for your family to pay sales tax if you live in, say, Illinois. But isn't it also reasonable to leave one state for another because of sales tax?


They're not always in a different state. If you live in California, you pay sales tax on online purchases pretty much always.


That's because California has tax-hungry laws concerning what defines a "nexus" (a business's presence in the state). It's difficult for many companies to avoid creating a California presence, so they're stuck collecting California sales tax as if they were based there.


Doesn't every state have similar laws? Indiana does - yet I don't normally pay sales tax online, because most of the companies aren't based in Indiana, whereas online companies really do tend to be in California.


Lots of states, but not every state. California is also of particular importance because it's so big: nobody would care as much if Delaware had laws like this.

However, in California, even if you only have a physical presence in some remote part of northern CA, suddenly that affects your ability to sell to 37 million other people.


I have firsthand experience in online retail and if California is 'tax hungry' for that reason, then every other state in the country is, also. If you have payroll in a state, you collect sales taxes for physical items shipping there.


Likewise, back when CDNow.com was it's own company it was located right outside of Philadelphia. Living in Pittsburgh, having to pay sales tax when buying from CDNow was always a consideration when deciding to buy music from them or someone else.


Does Amazon France pay for their employees' health insurance? What percentage of their paycheck has social security and medicare taken out?


For a couple years now, New York State has gotten away with forcing Amazon to charge sales tax via a similar state law regarding affiliates, does anyone know why amazon implemented the sales tax instead of dropping affiliates in that case?


It looks like they have a subsidiary based in NY; http://www.amazon.com/Locations-Careers/b?ie=UTF8&node=2...

Could also be their NY affiliates are more lucrative. There are a lot of large media type companies that have a presence in NY so maybe the referrals they bring in out weight the amount of sales lost from NY residents because of the need to charge sales tax.


I don't, but a guess may be that Amazon has some physical facilities in New York like a warehouse or office, meaning they can't say "they're making us pay tax even though we don't exist in the state and just mail people stuff" like they're saying in this case.

I don't know if Amazon has offices in New York or not, but that's my immediate guess.


You are correct sir: http://bit.ly/hFkxpK


Cost of lost sales in NY is lower, lots of people in NY still buy from Amazon rather than Walmart And Amazon didn't want a test case about whether having other services in NY such as advertising agency or stockbrokers, lawyers constituted a presence


If an affiliate in Illinois constitutes a presence for Amazon in Illinois, what happens when Amazon Adsense Ads appear on a web site hosted out of Illinois but run by a blogger who is a resident of Illinois? By my reckoning, Amazon is paying Google who in turn pay a resident of Illinois. How is this different from an Amazon affiliate?


Amazon has no business relationship with the person running the ad, their relationship is with Google. The two companies are distinct entities and Amazon can easily claim to have no control over what Google does (this last bit is important because when people try to be clever and create shell companies to get around various regulations the government will try to "pierce the corporate veil" and argue that the only purpose of the shell company is to act as a hidden agent for the original company.) In the case of affiliates the states are claiming that the affiliates are acting as agents on behalf of Amazon and therefore Amazon has a physical presence in the state via those agents.


There was a HN post about how AdSense affiliates in Philidelphia had to pay a large filing fee for being considered a business in the city.

http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1624250


The so-called 'Amazon law' is in 4 states now: New York, Rhode Island, North Carolina and now Illinois.

There are a number of states considering it, though, including California.


I'm pretty sure you can add Colorado: This being the reason I am not permitted by Amazon to become an affiliate.


Ethics aside, this seems extremely shortsighted on the part of the legislature. Amazon might compete strongly with local big boxes ("Main Street", my foot), but how much shipping business (and resulting jobs and tax revenue) is ultimately created by Amazon's sales in IL?


If the shipping is paid for by Amazon out-of-state, I'd be surprised if they see any sales tax from it.

Amazon hasn't stopped shipping to Illinois - they have simply stopped allowing affiliates in Illinois, so the decision is unlikely to change the amount of shipping. If they did manage to force Amazon to collect 10% sales tax, people might spend at most 10% less, because collecting sales taxes reduces their means, but all of that would be captured by the state immediately, rather than more taxation through indirect mechanisms like increasing the number of shipping employees, where they would capture far less of that 10%.

If they did force Amazon to collect the tax, they might also cause some people to buy at retail stores instead of online, but shipping to homes is probably more efficient in terms of labour than shipping to stores and having salespeople employed to sell them - so more tax capture there. People might instead buy from online stores in Illinois, now they no longer have a tax advantage - that would also mean more tax capture because more of the supply chain is in Illinois.

All in all, of all the possible outcomes, it seems very unlikely that tax revenue will be decreased because of this. Amazon is trying to bully the state of Illinois because it is one of many states; if other states follow suit, Amazon will almost certainly have to back down or give up on having affiliates altogether.


The affiliate program must increase the number of sales that Amazon makes or it wouldn't still exist. Of those additional sales generated by IL affiliates, some portion of them would have been shipped to IL - probably a disproportionate amount due to most IL-local sites being owned/maintained by IL residents.

The local ecosystem that Amazon indirectly supports is difficult to quantify, but I think you're dismissing it too quickly. Everything from the affiliates' state income tax to the tax on the fuel used to deliver the boxes needs to be considered.

We don't tax grocery stores for putting the milk man out of business, computers for eliminating type writer repairmen, nor email for the imminent demise of the USPS. Why Amazon?


How many states does it take Amazon to lose until they change their policies? Yes I understand the legalities of it — but there is something very strange about the fact that if I buy a 99 cent app from Apple they can collect the extra sales tax but if I purchased a $99 physical item from Amazon that they feel it's too hard.

As an affiliate here in NY I run a small side biz that generates a great deal of revenue from Amazon and I hate where this thing is going (what kills me is that it's a decent source of income — but not enough to pack up my bags and get a new address).


The difference is that Apple presumably has a legitimate, taxable presence in NY, whereas Amazon has none in Illinois.


They probably won't ever change their policies--I would venture to guess that the margin they gain from the affiliate program is less than 8% of their total revenue (which is very approximately what they would lose if they were forced to collect sales tax).


It's also about running the affiliate programs themselves....

Amazon isn't stupid - who knows what the specific strategy is here, politically or otherwise - they've capitulated in some states, turfed others - it all probably comes down to the numbers.


If you are interested in doing something about this, I'd recommend you check out the Performance Marketing Association (http://www.performancemarketingassociation.com/). One of their main focuses is addressing affiliate nexus legislation and they have representation from most major affiliate networks and several large merchants.


It is sort of alarming to see users here demanding more taxation at the state and federal level.

Amazon has been around for awhile. Why is this a problem now?


It's time for the Congress to get involved here.

Pass a law that each state can specify a single tax rate for any shipments into that state. Then all retailers everywhere would have to collect that tax and pass it on to the state.

If the state wants to distribute the money locally let them handle it themself - the retailer sends a summary with the city names, and total amount, and the state can figure out how to distribute it.

I'm a fan of taxing via sales tax instead of income tax.


> Pass a law that each state can specify a single tax rate for any shipments into that state. Then all retailers everywhere would have to collect that tax and pass it on to the state.

At that point states would be able to set higher rates for shipping than for in-state sales tax. That would create a protectionist economy for their in-state businesses which is precisely what the founders feared would occur if you allowed states to control inter-state commerce.

States have a bias to their own businesses because their business owners/employees are also voters.


I imagine the federal sales tax would be set to the same level as the state sales tax. States couldn't change one without changing the other.

(I've not really thought this through. The above is just a random thought. Be nice.)


Then states will likely raise the in-state and out of state tax to high levels, and provide rebates/subsidies to in-state businesses only.

Best not to go down that road.


I think part of the nightmare for an internet company is dealing with the myriad of tax laws--not at the state level, but at the county/city level. Sometimes some cities for example declare tax holidays on certain goods. How do you deal with that regularly? Perhaps a company of Amazon's size could, but suppose you are just a small company? If you are local, then you're aware of such things, if you're not...


As much as I'd hate to lose thousands of dollars every month, if Amazon were to terminate their program in Ontario for the same reasons, I'd fully understand them. I imagine that the extra income generated by affiliates would pretty much be lost due to the sales tax, and Amazon is a business, not a charity organization.


I wonder if the states realize that one of the possible outcomes involves Amazon retreating to only a few states-

which then elect to allow the practice to keep the entirety of Amazon's revenue flowing through their borders

It's not necessarily inevitable that the states will be able to muscle Amazon to their wishes.


I don't suppose having your LLC based out of state is going to save you here is it?


Actually that should do the trick. Your company earns the commissions, and it's not based in Illinois. So you should be gold.


It just worries me that the word "residents" was used. Maybe they assumed that most people reading the notice wouldn't be businesses.

I also reckon that your primary physical business location/address matters. Seems to matter for a lot of things, but I'm just learning about this stuff now.


I don't see the point in punishing the affiliates or how the tax law makes any difference in how the affiliates get paid for generating sales.


Are there many states left that Amazon does allow affiliates from?


Per the article, everywhere except Colorado, North Carolina, and now Illinois.




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