The Oklahoman

Sales tax increase would hurt business

POINT OF VIEW | RATE IS ALREADY SIXTH HIGHEST

- [GARY VARVEL/THE INDIANAPOL­IS STAR] [STEVE BREEN/SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE] BY J. SCOTT MOODY AND WENDY P. WARCHOLIK

YOUR VIEWS

The sales tax is sometimes perceived as a “good tax” because it taxes consumptio­n and therefore minimizes tax-induced distortion­s in the rest of the economy. For example, a do-it-yourself homeowner who goes to Home Depot to buy a hammer to hang a picture is doing so for personal use, i.e., consumptio­n.

Yet that same hammer could have been bought by a local carpenter who will use it to build cabinets that will be installed in new homes. In this case, the hammer is a business investment.

But the sales tax does not distinguis­h between who buys the hammer and for what purpose.

This is not an academic exercise. This process plays out for millions of products that are sold in Oklahoma each year — products that could be used by consumers or businesses, ranging from printer paper to lawn mowers to smartphone­s, just to name a few.

In fact, according to a recent study from the Council on State Taxation, 47 percent of Oklahoma’s sales tax was paid by businesses in fiscal year 2014.

Alas, the negative impact of the sales tax on businesses does not end there. During the manufactur­ing of the hammer, the sales tax was actually paid multiple times as it moved through the production process. (We use this example for illustrati­ve purposes; states try to avoid this negative impact by exempting many products from the sales tax, so the extent of sales tax exemptions varies by state.)

This is called sales tax pyramiding and it results in the final user not only paying for the sales tax at the register, but also for some or all of the previous sales taxes paid during production, which are embedded in the final price of the good or service.

Washington commission­ed a study to examine the pyramiding issues in that state’s gross receipts tax (a sales tax with few exemptions). The study found that manufactur­ing was hit particular­ly hard, ranging from a high of 6.7 times for food production to 2.6 times for printing and publishing.

Sales tax pyramiding can negatively impact the cost of living by raising the overall cost of goods and services.

Oklahoma already has the sixth-highest state and local sales tax in the country, according to the Tax Foundation. This high sales tax rate can drive consumers to do their shopping in neighborin­g states or localities — since Oklahoma and many neighborin­g states allow complex local-option sales taxes. The internet also entices consumers with sales-tax-free online shopping. Such cross-border or virtual shopping created from sales tax difference­s hurts local businesses that must contend with high sales tax rates.

Further increasing Oklahoma’s sales tax from its already-nosebleed levels will create a significan­t, negative blemish on the state’s business climate. Manufactur­ing, in particular, will spend precious resources avoiding the higher sales tax rate and resulting sales-tax pyramiding rather than investing in new equipment and hiring new workers.

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Wendy Warcholik
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J. Scott Moody

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