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The COVID-19 state sales tax windfall

Phil Dean (), Maclean Gaulin (), Nathan Seegert and Mu-Jeung Yang ()
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Phil Dean: University of Utah
Maclean Gaulin: University of Utah
Mu-Jeung Yang: University of Oklahoma

International Tax and Public Finance, 2023, vol. 30, issue 5, No 9, 1408-1434

Abstract: Abstract Policymakers were surprised to find increases in sales tax revenues in 2020 due to expectations that they would drop 8–20%. We investigate this puzzle and provide novel insights into consumption taxes based on this experience. Using a case study from the State of Utah, we document that shifts in the structure of consumption played a significant role in the robustness of sales tax revenue. Two factors stand out in our results. The first factor is the structure of the tax base for sales taxes in the USA. This tax base covers only a subset of personal consumption, excluding, for example, many services. During the pandemic, when services were restricted or shut down, this caused a shift in spending toward goods that are more likely to be in the sales tax base. The second factor is the boom in e-commerce during the pandemic, which boosted sales tax collections. This was catalyzed by recent legal changes that made the collection of sales taxes in e-commerce easier. Interestingly, this e-commerce boost also shifted the point of sale and related sales tax revenues away from urban areas toward suburban areas. Our case study of the pandemic’s effect on sales taxes in the USA generally, and Utah’s experience specifically, provides lessons for consumption taxes, such as the VAT more broadly, and lessons on the role of consumption taxes for tax revenue volatility.

Keywords: Sales tax; Online shopping; e-Commerce; COVID-19; Tax revenue (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: H20 H71 L81 R51 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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DOI: 10.1007/s10797-023-09778-w

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