Using a detailed establishment level data, this study finds that the imposition of a sales tax on remote sellers resulted in a 4.8 to 7.2 percent sales increase for brick and mortar retail sellers in 2018 and 2019. Employment gains for such brick and mortar sellers for this period was approximately 4.3 percent. Such sales and employment increases were not even, as bigger establishments, those part of a national chain, and those part of a publicly-traded company generally experienced larger sales and employment gains. However, the onset of the pandemic saw much of this gain erased, as sales declined and shifted back to online retailers
The Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service periodically issues revisions to its publications. The mo...
More than fifty years ago, in 1967, before there was an Internet, the U.S. Supreme Court held that t...
Several US states have recently implemented laws requiring the collection of sales tax on online pur...
The case of South Dakota v. Wayfair opened the door for states to tax remote sellers who did not hav...
Hannah Meehan discusses the removal of the physical presence requirement following South Dakota v....
This article analyzes the implications of the Wayfair decision and considers the steps state governm...
As state budgets have come under increasing pressure, many states have enacted so called Amazon taxe...
Many states’ sales and use tax provisions, updated in response to the Supreme Court’s decision in So...
When a multichannel retailer opens its first retail store in a state, the firm is obligated to colle...
Over the last four decades, the aggregate sales tax base across all states has contracted, creating ...
For over 50 years, U.S. Supreme Court precedents held that state sales taxes could not be constituti...
This is the third of a series of essays wherein we analyze the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s decision in ...
For 51 years, the physical presence rule has hampered states in collecting sales and use taxes from ...
Benjamin Franklin said that nothing could be as certain as death and taxes. In today’s booming onlin...
This article reviews the Wayfair decision and its implications. First Professor Pomp considers the t...
The Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service periodically issues revisions to its publications. The mo...
More than fifty years ago, in 1967, before there was an Internet, the U.S. Supreme Court held that t...
Several US states have recently implemented laws requiring the collection of sales tax on online pur...
The case of South Dakota v. Wayfair opened the door for states to tax remote sellers who did not hav...
Hannah Meehan discusses the removal of the physical presence requirement following South Dakota v....
This article analyzes the implications of the Wayfair decision and considers the steps state governm...
As state budgets have come under increasing pressure, many states have enacted so called Amazon taxe...
Many states’ sales and use tax provisions, updated in response to the Supreme Court’s decision in So...
When a multichannel retailer opens its first retail store in a state, the firm is obligated to colle...
Over the last four decades, the aggregate sales tax base across all states has contracted, creating ...
For over 50 years, U.S. Supreme Court precedents held that state sales taxes could not be constituti...
This is the third of a series of essays wherein we analyze the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s decision in ...
For 51 years, the physical presence rule has hampered states in collecting sales and use taxes from ...
Benjamin Franklin said that nothing could be as certain as death and taxes. In today’s booming onlin...
This article reviews the Wayfair decision and its implications. First Professor Pomp considers the t...
The Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service periodically issues revisions to its publications. The mo...
More than fifty years ago, in 1967, before there was an Internet, the U.S. Supreme Court held that t...
Several US states have recently implemented laws requiring the collection of sales tax on online pur...