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[DOCID: f:hc190enr.txt]
H.Con. Res.190
Agreed to November 19, 1999
One Hundred Sixth Congress
of the
United States of America
AT THE FIRST SESSION
Begun and held at the City of Washington on Wednesday,
the sixth day of January, one thousand nine hundred and ninety-nine
Concurrent Resolution
Whereas electronic commerce is not bound by geography and its borders
are not easily discernible;
Whereas transmissions over the Internet are made through packet-
switching, making it impossible to determine with any degree of
certainty the precise geographic route or endpoints of specific
Internet transmissions and infeasible to separate domestic from
foreign Internet transmissions;
Whereas inconsistent and inadministrable taxes imposed on Internet
activity by subnational and national governments threaten not only to
subject consumers, businesses, and other users engaged in interstate
and foreign commerce to multiple, confusing, and burdensome taxation,
but also to restrict the growth and continued technological
maturation of the Internet itself;
Whereas the complexity of the issue of domestic taxation of electronic
commerce is compounded when considered at the global level with
almost 200 separate national governments;
Whereas the First Annual Report of the United States Government Working
Group on Electronic Commerce found that fewer than 10,000,000 people
worldwide were using the Internet in 1995, that more than 140,000,000
people worldwide were using the Internet in 1998, and that more than
1,000,000,000 people worldwide will be using the Internet in the
first decade of the next century;
Whereas information technology industries have accounted for more than
one-third of real growth in the United States' Gross Domestic Product
over the past 3 years;
Whereas information technology industries employ more than 7,000,000
people in the United States, and by 2006 more than half of the United
States workforce is expected to be employed in industries that are
either major producers or intensive users of information technology
products and services;
Whereas electronic commerce among businesses worldwide is expected to
grow from $43,000,000,000 in 1998 to more than $1,300,000,000,000 by
2003, and electronic retail sales to consumers worldwide are expected
to grow from $8,000,000,000 in 1998 to more than $108,000,000,000 by
2003;
Whereas the Internet Tax Freedom Act of 1998 enacted a policy against
special, multiple, and discriminatory taxation of the Internet and
electronic commerce, and stated that United States policy should be
to seek bilateral, regional, and multilateral agreements to remove
barriers to global electronic commerce;
Whereas the World Trade Organization, at its May 1998 ministerial
conference, adopted a declaration that all 132 member countries
``will continue their current practice of not imposing customs duties
on electronic transmissions'';
Whereas the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and
industry groups issued a joint declaration at an October 1998
ministerial meeting on global electronic commerce opposing special,
multiple, and discriminatory taxation of the electronic commerce and
the Internet;
Whereas the Committee on Fiscal Affairs of the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development has stated that neutrality,
efficiency, certainty, simplicity, effectiveness, fairness, and
flexibility are the broad principles that should govern the taxation
of electronic commerce;
Whereas the United States has issued joint statements on electronic
commerce with Australia, the European Union, France, Ireland, Japan,
and the Republic of Korea opposing special, multiple, and
discriminatory taxation of electronic commerce; and
Whereas a July 1999 United Nations Report on Human Development urged
world governments to impose ``bit taxes'' on electronic
transmissions, raising concerns that United States policy against
special, multiple, and discriminatory taxation of the Internet may be
undermined: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate concurring),
That the Congress--
(1) urges the President to seek a global consensus supporting--
(A) a permanent international ban on tariffs on electronic
commerce; and
(B) an international ban on bit, multiple, and
discriminatory taxation of electronic commerce and the
Internet;
(2) urges the President to instruct the United States
delegation to the November 1999 World Trade Organization
ministerial meeting in Seattle, Washington to seek to make
permanent and binding the moratorium on tariffs on electronic
transmissions adopted by the World Trade Organization in May 1998;
(3) urges the President to seek adoption by the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development, and implementation by the
group's 29 member countries, of an international ban on bit,
multiple, and discriminatory taxation of electronic commerce and
the Internet; and
(4) urges the President to oppose any proposal by any country,
the United Nations, or any other multilateral organization to
establish a ``bit tax'' on electronic transmissions.
Attest:
Clerk of the House of Representatives.
Attest:
Secretary of the Senate.
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