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23 Tax Memo 1 (1960)

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TAX MEMO



No.  23                                                         September,   1960


      The Indirect Sales Tax Illusion


John  F. Due,  Professor  of Economics,  University  of Illinois


   One  of the most long-lived illusions in
the field of public finance in Canada has
been resurrected in the July statements of
Ontario's  Premier   Frost  relating to
Dominion-provincial fiscal relations. This
is the notion that if the provinces could levy
a sales tax on an indirect basis, they could
operate the tax much  more  satisfactorily
than the present sales taxes imposed in the
direct form. Specifically, the Premier pro-
posed: Failing  action  by the Federal
government on point (1), [which related to
the provinces' share of income tax collec-
tions] Ontario proposes that the Federal
government agree to initiate a constitutional
amendment  enabling the provinces to impose
an indirect sales tax.1

   NATURE OF AN INDIRECT
             SALES   TAX
   A  review of the proposal requires first
a  statement of the meaning of the term
indirect sales tax. According to news-
paper reports, when the Premier was asked
to explain what he meant by such a tax, he
replied that he could not explain precisely.2
Presumably  the term refers to a sales tax
imposed,  technically, upon  the vendor,
essentially as a charge for the privilege of
   1 As quoted in the Toronto Globe and Mail, July 26, 1960.
   'Tbid.


selling at retail, the amount of tax liability
being measured  by  the sales (or gross
receipts from sales) of taxable goods during
the period. Thus, the legal incidence of the
tax would rest upon the retailer, whereas
under the present direct form, as used in
seven provinces, the incidence is on the
purchaser, the retailer being designated as a
tax collecting agent for the province. The
coverage of the tax, so far as scope of tax-
able articles is concerned, is not affected by
the legal form of the tax. In the United
States, about half of the states using sales
taxes impose the tax in the indirect form as
a levy on the retailer for the privilege of
doing business at retail, while the other half
impose the tax on the sale to the consumer.
With  this form, as in Canada, the legal inci-
dence is on the consumer, the retailer being
responsible for collection of the tax and
payment of it to the state.
   The  statement sometimes made  about
the  indirect form that it would involve
application of the tax to the firms' turnover
is almost meaningless; the tax would apply
to the figure of sales of taxable commodities,
which  is also the basic determinant of the
vendor's tax liability under the present form
of tax. It is not at all clear what the users of
the phrase mean by turnover.


             Additional copies of this Memo may be obtained at a price of 154.

CANADIAN                   TAX         FOUNDATION

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