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1 Joseph Henchman & Scott Drenkard, State and Local Governments Impose Hefty Taxes on Cell Phone Consumers 1 (2013)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/ffdffxz0001 and id is 1 raw text is: FONAINFisca                                               Fac
January 30, 2013
No. 355
State and Local Governments Impose Hefty
Taxes on Cell Phone Consumers
Nebraska Consumers Face Highest Tax Rates; Average Consumer Pays 17% in Wireless
Taxes and Fees
By
Joseph Henchman & Scott Drenkard
The number of U.S. cell phone subscribers has grown significantly in recent years from 48.7 million in 1997
to 321.7 million in 2012. That period has also seen a fall in landline telephones, with 34 percent of
households now only using wireless phones. 1 This trend toward cell phones has not gone unnoticed by state
and local governments, many of which have targeted wireless services for higher taxes.
U.S. wireless consumers pay an average 17.18 percent in taxes and fees on their cell phone bill, including
11.36 percent in state and local charges, according to a newly released study that identifies and calculates
wireless taxes and fees.2 In Nebraska, the combined federal-state-local average rate is 24.49 percent, and in
six other states (Washington, New York, Florida, Illinois, Rhode Island, and Missouri) it exceeds 20 percent.
Twenty-six states have average state-local wireless taxes and fees in excess of 10 percent, and taking into
account the infamous federal telephone excise tax (dating to the Spanish-American War and partly repealed
in 2006), cell phone subscribers in seven states pay more than 20 percent in taxes. (See the table for a full
list.)
1 CTIA, U.S. Wireless Quick Facts,  ------------
U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Spending on Cell Phone Services Rapidly Approaching That of Residential
Phone  Services  (D ec.  13, 2007),  k  oo - - -  -  -------------------- ------------.--
2 Scott Mackey, Wireless Taxes and Fees Continue Growth Trend, STATE TAX NOTES (Oct. 29, 2012),
}', ,' v :   ir ce, u~ta ..coi/ axba  /smua t\i ! -  '   +   e ) ,ci   e   [ ,Ju  (subscription required). Data is
provided from FCC studies and the wireless industry, and a methodology developed by the Council on State Taxation is used to
calculate averages.

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