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Total Number of Subscribers: 464 | |
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Date:26th November 2008 |
Compiled by Mr. M. Sathya Kumar | |
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Taxation Of Software
Introduction
Over the past fifteen years, the software industry has exploded into a high growth and extremely productive business. Traditionally, sales/use tax has applied only to the sale of tangible personal property . Thus, the sale of services is a transaction exempt from sales/use taxation . Similarly, sales of non-tangible goods are also exempt from taxation. In the software realm, programs written for a client's specific needs are not taxed since what is sold is treated as a service . Programs which are otherwise goods but are sold intangibly (e.g., over a modem) also are not taxed because they do not conform to the tangibility requirement
This essay will review three issues of current interest to software companies in focusing on how these issues can and should be analyzed:
Background On Software
i. Operating Systems:- Operating systems, as the name implies, are programs that actually instruct the computer on how to operate. These systems are written under various codes such as MS DOS.
ii. Application Programs:- Application programs are the instructions which are actually manipulated by the computer and tell it how to perform various tasks. These include the word processing software with which all attorneys are familiar as well as the Lotus and Excel spreadsheet type software.
iii. Files:- Finally, there are files which are maintained. Files are not instructions but are simply compilations of data. For instance, for a lawyer these would include stored documents which have been prepared. Software can be "canned", i.e. pre-written or standardized, "custom", i.e. specifically coded for a specific user for a specific purpose, or a modified form of pre-existing software. It can be stored and delivered in many forms (i.e. on disk, by telephone line, via modems, within the memory of a computer, through computer punch cards). Perhaps it is because of the multiplicity of forms which can embody software that much of the difficulty arises in the tax area. Software can assume at various times aspects of a service transaction, tangible personal property or intangible property. Because tax statutes often tax each of these differently, this often results in confusion under the tax regimes.
Taxation Of Software For Sales Tax Purposes
(A) "Tangible personal property" means personal property which may be seen, weighed, measured, felt, or touched or is in any other manner perceptible to the senses. "Tangible personal property" does not mean stocks, bonds, notes, insurance, or other obligations or securities.
Historically, the statutory difference between and has been relatively easy to apply in the sales tax arena. Advances in technology, however, have done much to blur this line between tangible and intangible property.
Computer software ranks as perhaps the leading technology which defies easy classification. One problem is that the industry itself does not clearly define the term software. Moreover, information contained in "software" can be transmitted through several media. For example, the information can be delivered on a computer through disc, digital transmission over telephone lines, through direct input by an individual, through a magnetic tape transfer or, in some old fashioned cases, punched cards. The law in this area became confused early in its development. Initially, taxpayers sought to characterize software as tangible personal property in order to claim an investment tax credit for expenditures on software for federal income tax purposes.
In the early years, taxpayers contesting sales tax liability utilized precedent to argue successfully that software was not subject to sales tax because the intangible information, not the tangible media, was actually what was being sold . As the technology developed and software was more frequently sold to the general public in shrink-wrapped packages, the courts began to view software as tangible personal property in a manner more analogous to books, records, photographs and video cassettes . One court has held that the arrangement of instructions on a tangible medium constitutes a "corporeal body", and hence, tangible property . Another case found that computer software is ordinary common tangible property, at least where delivered on disks.
(B) Sales Tax Planning for the Software Industry.
Differentiate between various softwares:-
A closer case arises if a computer consultant retains the copyright to the software. In such a case, the services for the first customer may be exempt as a personal service transaction, but the license of the software to a second customer with slight modifications on the original software may be subject to sales tax.
Electronic transmission of Software:-
Differentiation of charges between Software and Consulting Services:-
Even assuming the transfer of the software may be subject to sales tax, the consulting services should be exempt from tax as personal service transactions. Of course, the Department of Revenue may attempt to reallocate costs if it appears the taxpayer is making an unreasonable allocation to services.
Taxation Of Computer Software For Ad Valorem Tax Purposes
A. The Taxability Issue. B. Taxation of Off -The Shelf-Software. C. Taxation of Software as an Intangible.
In several states that issue remains opens and, certainly, it does not take a vast extension of existing case law to argue that the physical embodiment of software in a tangible form, such as in a diskette, should no more make the underlying software taxable as tangible personal property than embodiment of the copyright words of Gone With the Wind in the covers of the book or in the form of a videotape makes the copyright of Gone With the Wind separately taxable as tangible personal property. D. Taxation of Capitalized Software Costs. E. Legislative Responses. F. Issues.
For instance, under the applicable state statute
Conclusion
system which is based upon the applications/operational distinction of software promotes most of the goals of an ideal tax system: efficiency, certainty, equity, and economic growth. A functional distinction also creates vertical categories of taxable items rather than the horizontal categories created by the tangible/intangible standard. Using these concepts accepted in the industry, legislatures may easily identify the broad categories of software which it desires to tax. Accordingly, all the industry participants-- programmers, distributors, retailers, and consumers--may accurately and reliably assess the tax treatment which a transaction will incur. Parties will no longer be able to evade taxes by restructuring their transactions. The sales/use tax system will be equitably and consistently applied. Thus, this system presents the best alternative to the current sales/use taxation of software.
Article by Romit Agrawal, a renowed taxation expert.
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