Bridge Span 15-4: Discriminatory Digital Taxes: Also Certain?

As Benjamin Franklin famously wrote, “… in this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes.” Technology has had an impact on both, providing us with longer life expectancies and a better quality of life. Taking a distinctly different approach, tax authorities find technology too tempting to resist as the target for more taxes, even if those taxes discriminate against digital goods or services.

Digital goods are those delivered completely electronically, such as music or videos, downloaded books or video games. Digital services, such as job searching or resume preparation and editing, are also delivered only electronically.

But not only are states taxing digital goods and service-in some cases they are giving them discriminatory tax treatment, or even subjecting digital goods to duplicate and redundant taxes.

Currently, one purchase could easily be taxed by the jurisdiction where the good is purchased, again where the merchant is located, and yet again in the jurisdiction where the wireless bill for the user’s account is sent. One purchase with sales tax applied three times, a delightful result for those whose only job it is to increase government spending by finding new ways to increase the tax money taken from citizens.

One might ask why digital goods are taxed at all. After all, digital goods and services do not use state or local infrastructure. They don’t produce trash or require the burning fuel or put wear and tear on roads for delivery by truck.

Even though Congress has had legislation before it since 2010, it again wants to hear more. So today at 10AM the Subcommittee on Regulatory Reform, Commercial and Antitrust Law of the House Judiciary Committee will take up the “Digital Goods and Services Tax Fairness Act of 2015” for discussion, particularly focusing on the “nexus” issue.

The Act would address the nexus problem, determining where a business is located or where a transaction takes place, by prohibiting state and local taxing jurisdictions from imposing “multiple or discriminatory” taxes on the sale of digital goods or the use of digital services. Goods already taxed could not be taxed a second time because they are digital nor could a higher rate be levied on a digital good or service than on the analog good or service.

A fundamental tenant of sound tax policy is that productive economic activity should only be taxed once. Similarly, a retail sales transaction should be taxed only once, and by only a single tax jurisdiction.

Discriminating against the digital and online is never going to be acceptable, just as discriminating against other industries will never be the right tax policy. The problem has been well defined for years.  The answer is the Digital Goods and Services Tax Fairness Act.

Bridge Span: 15-5 Is An Economically Solid Mobile Future in the Pipeline?

Earlier this year Cisco released its annual Visual Network Index (VNI) Forecast Report: Mobile Data Traffic Update, 2014-2019. The report makes clear that North America, mostly the United States, has been a global leader in mobile broadband development.  Case in pont, North America had 39.1 percent of all global 4G connections in 2014 with projections showing that by 2019 North America’s share will increase to 42.1 percent.

A more granular view of what is driving those connections is stunning:

  • 40.7 million smart phones were added to the mobile network in 2014.
  • Eighty-six percent of the U.S. population, 290.1 million, will be mobile users by 2019, up from 268.5 million in 2014.

Mobile data traffic in 2014 was 32 times greater than the volume a mere five years earlier, and with the growth projected in the next couple years, traffic will dramatically increase again. The new users will be coming online to join in taking advantage of the great benefits of mobile broadband. As the Report indicates:

  • Mobile data traffic will grow 7-fold from 2014 to 2019, a compound annual growth rate of 47%.
  • Mobile traffic per user will reach 11,510 megabytes per month by 2019, up from 1,960 megabytes per month in 2014, a compound annual growth rate of 41%.

The economic benefits are just as dazzling. The Brattle Group has recently released a study “Licensed Spectrum: A Vital Resource for the American Economy,” detailing the economic analysis of the value of licensed spectrum.

The study illuminates several key points:

  • Because of licensed spectrum, the U.S. is currently the global leader in mobile services.
  • Licensed spectrum for commercial wireless networks results in over $400 billion in economic activity every year, including $173 billion in direct spending and another $228 billion in indirect impacts.
  • Licensed spectrum is a job multiplier. For every person employed in the wireless industry, another 6.5 people are employed. The result is 1.3 million jobs supported by the wireless industry.
  • Consumer welfare attributable to the licensed spectrum is measured in the trillions of dollars.

This exciting mobile future faces a significant challenge as it depends on a current and continued pipeline of available spectrum. The federal government, the FCC and the administration, have promised a timely incentive spectrum auction, and the release of 500 MHz of additional spectrum by 2020. These are critical in keeping the pipeline running.

Also critical is a broad comprehensive plan that details how the federal government will plan to accommodate consumer demand beyond 2020. If the past is predictive then predictions will miss actual future use of mobile technology by an order of magnitude. The federal government is already behind on planning for what happens a mere five years away. That is not acceptable.

Broadband, including mobile broadband is too important to too much of economy to not be a priority issue in Washington. The time for it being a priority to talk about has passed, the time to prioritize action is now. If this pipeline doesn’t stay full we can say goodbye to mobile broadband.

Bridge Pier 15-1: As featured in The Hill – Patents and Pugilism in the Piney Woods

Patents, which protect and encourage technological and scientific advance, and pugilism, “the sweet science,” seem to have more in common than one might suspect.  Floyd Mayweather, Jr. a professional boxer who is recognized as the best boxer of his generation, has quipped, “Everywhere I go, I will make a good payday. But we got to choose the right opponent and the right time and the right venue.”  That same quote could have come from a trial lawyer exploiting the current patent law to extort a settlement from an innovator.

Read more at:  http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/judicial/254222-patents-and-pugilism-in-the-piney-woods