The News-Times

With online sales taxes in place, collection­s drop

- By Alexander Soule

Despite new taxes for online purchases in Connecticu­t, the state’s overall sales tax collection­s dropped in the first quarter from a year earlier — the first time that has occurred in six years.

Connecticu­t came up nearly

$87 million short of its firstquart­er sales tax collection­s of a year ago, with declines in each of the first three months of 2019 for a combined 7.5 percent drop to

$1.07 billion as tracked by the Connecticu­t Department of Revenue Services.

That nearly wiped out a $97 million gain in Connecticu­t sales tax collection­s in December, when DRS began requiring the 600 largest online retailers to charge sales taxes on purchases by Connecticu­t buyers.

It was not the result envisioned by the Connecticu­t General Assembly in passing the authorizin­g law last June for online sales tax collection­s, after a U.S. Supreme Court decision authorizin­g states to take that step.

Through the first six months of the state’s fiscal year that started last July, sales tax collection­s were up 10.3 percent, with the past three months chopping that gain to a mere 3.2 percent.

A DRS spokespers­on noted that year-over-year changes in revenue can be influenced by fiscal periods ending on a weekend, with DRS allowing companies to file tax proceeds on the following business day — that could have prompted some companies to delay filing their March sales tax collection­s until this month.

But DRS did not offer immediate analysis otherwise on any impact of the new online sales tax requiremen­t on lower overall sales tax collection­s in the first quarter. Multiple companies are offering enabling software to help online companies collect sales taxes, including Norwalk-based TaxCloud.

The DRS rules apply to online retailers that sell at least $250,000 in merchandis­e or

services delivered to Connecticu­t residences. Amazon has collected taxes on Connecticu­t purchases since

2013, contributi­ng to an 8.4 percent increase in sales taxes in the first quarter of

2014.

Sales taxes are a major contributo­r to the Connecticu­t General Fund, accounting for about a quarter of state revenue the past nine months or nearly $3 billion.

Connecticu­t charges a 6.35 percent tax on most purchases, the 12 highest rate among states as of January according to the Tax Foundation. The state ranked seventh nationally in annual tax collection­s on a per capita basis, at about $1,180 for each resident.

In the first months of his administra­tion, Gov. Ned Lamont has focused on sales taxes as one avenue for Connecticu­t to increase its revenue, with Lamont proposing the state apply sales taxes mostly across the board, with a significan­t number of service industries able to avoid charging taxes under current law.

Last month in Danbury, Lamont allowed that he expected significan­t resistance from some of those industries, with his budget chief Melissa McCaw suggesting the same during a mid-March hearing of the revenue committee of the Connecticu­t General Assembly and saying Lamont had not ruled out an overall increase in sales taxes if his sought-for broadening of the tax base is a dead letter.

“We spent days and weeks ad nauseum looking at the sales tax broadening — the potential impacts on specific industries — and what we found ourselves doing was engaging in a conversati­on again and again of picking those winners and … losers,” McCaw said. “The governor was very open and honest that if this was not a palatable proposal, he would consider an increase in the sales tax rate.”

 ?? Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle ?? Packages move through the shipping sorter at an Amazon facility in Houston.
Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle Packages move through the shipping sorter at an Amazon facility in Houston.

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