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Social media companies are like tobacco companies; tax their products for their harms
Social media companies are like tobacco companies; tax their products for their harms

Yahoo

time22-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Social media companies are like tobacco companies; tax their products for their harms

(Photo by Nicole Neri/Minnesota Reformer) If you are sick of big tech's creepy data collection and invasive advertisements, then you might like a new bill, authored by Senate Taxes Committee Chair Ann Rest, DFL-New Hope, proposing a tax on data collection by large social media platforms. By assessing a flat rate as well as additional per capita fees on social media platforms with over 100,000 monthly users, SF3197 would raise an estimated $137 million in 2026-27 from the 14 largest platforms operating in Minnesota. Like efforts to curtail multinational corporate tax avoidance in 2023, this is an important and innovative idea that would once again make Minnesota a national leader in creating a stronger and more equitable tax code. Democratic lawmakers registered enthusiastic support during initial hearings, with pointed criticisms of an exploitative industry. House Ways and Means Chair Zack Stephenson, DFL-Coon Rapids, and Sen. Grant Hauschild, DFL-Hermantown, likened the data mining tax to taxes on smoking and mineral extraction, respectively. Hauschild went so far as to describe social media platforms as leeches, and he's not off base. In 2024, for example, Meta made $62 billion in after-tax profits on $164 billion in revenue for an astounding 42% profit margin. Out of $69 billion in net revenue, they paid just $8.3 billion in taxes for an effective tax rate of 12%. These earnings don't result from new value or innovation in the traditional sense, but from attention-seeking business models that create addictive behavior among users while generating few jobs and little in socially productive economic activity. Multiple scientific studies have found social media use is strongly associated with increased rates of mental health challenges like depression, anxiety and disordered eating, especially among children and adolescents. Social media advertising models have also contributed to the degradation of our information ecosystem, which is an essential pillar of democracy. The southwest Metro and southeastern Minnesota lost 10 local newspapers last April alone, all replaced with nothing other than Facebook rage and viral conspiracy theories. In my testimony on the bill, I explained how the policy could be described as a Pigouvian tax — a tax levied on a socially harmful activity in hopes of reducing its prevalence and/or raising revenue to compensate for its deleterious effects. Big tech is increasingly leveraging in-depth user knowledge to extract maximum profit. To allow these practices to proliferate with minimal regulation is bad enough, but to do so without any fiscal compensation is simply foolish. A tax on data mining is especially important in the case of social media platforms because they offer their services for free, in exchange for access to consumer data, which is then monetized through the sale of advertising. Economists describe this as a barter — you give them lots of data about yourself, and in exchange they let you scroll for free — and policy experts have written on the importance of taxing such transactions, both to discourage the rampant acceleration of hidden extraction, and so that the public can benefit from growing industries in which traditional monetary transactions don't occur. To put it in simple terms: The Zucks of the world are enriching themselves by pumping us full of free content that comes with high hidden costs. The new tax would act as a limiter, or at least a compensator, for those hidden costs. Similar to the discussion around sales tax exemptions, there is a fairness argument for businesses here as well. According to the Department of Revenue, businesses pay nearly half of all state sales taxes, but not all industries incur the same sales tax liabilities. White collar and other intangible services are generally not subject to sales taxes while many tangible goods are. A parallel pattern plays out in the broader economy: If growing online industries generate substantial profit based on the value of consumer data, but consumer data is not taxable, then these industries have an inherent advantage over others, even if those others provide more socially productive goods and services. That's a lot of reasons to celebrate. None of these arguments will persuade influential business groups to support the idea. With an evenly split House, any tax increase will face a difficult path to becoming law. Initial objections by the business-funded Council on State Taxation follow a familiar pattern — using legalese and overly complex language to grant an air of authority to their arguments that boil down more simply to 'our wealthy funders don't want to pay taxes.' But while many of these points are in bad faith, Minnesota would be the first state to pass this policy, and there are implementation questions as well as a guarantee of court challenges, which have arisen over similar policies in Maryland. Legal challenges will arise, not because it is illegal or unjustified, but because large tech firms have the money and incentive to fight tooth and nail against any new tax. This is what happened with digital ad taxes in Maryland, but advocates there have cleared significant hurdles, and the state is collecting tax revenue in the meantime. There's something deeply undemocratic about this strategy of legal obstruction, and Minnesota shouldn't be deterred. As bad news goes, that's not the worst. The data mining tax, though certainly worthwhile, is the result of a politics that sees taxes as a punishment that should be heaped only on the wicked. I am all for taxing extractive practices, but those sorts of policies won't get us anywhere near the revenues we need to avoid looming cuts to education and disability services, let alone mitigate the damage wrought by impending federal budget cuts. The real revenues we need will require raising taxes on a larger swath of Minnesota residents and businesses — something politicians on both sides of the aisle are very reluctant to do. In tax policy circles, there's a phrase used to describe this dynamic. 'Don't tax me, don't tax thee; tax the man behind the tree!' In other words, everyone wants a tax that raises revenue from someone else. And that's the exact sort of thinking we are seeing here, as fingers point to a handful of large companies with poor reputations that are nowhere near the primary culprits of our top heavy economy. In New York, for example, a similar bill created a rate and fee structure much the same as this one, but applied it to all data collection, not just that by social media platforms. That policy design brought in banks, credit card companies, cell phone providers, and more. That would raise considerably more revenue and much more meaningfully crack down on unfettered data collection as a business model. But it would seem that even those major industries didn't make for a clear enough villain for Minnesota legislators this time around. Furthermore, and somewhat ironically, some of the same senators that railed impressively against social media platforms are also moving to potentially expand tax breaks for data centers run by some of the very same companies impacted by the social media data mining tax. I think they mean well, and I can understand the desire to attract new high-paying jobs. But the contrast reveals that we are still in need of a deeper attitude adjustment around taxes. Taxing online enterprises is essential to the state's long-term budgetary stability, so I am glad we are starting the conversation. In a bad budget year, it's refreshing to see legislators fighting to make more profitable corporations pay their fair share. But this policy is not on par with our revenue needs. We can't just find someone we don't like and tax them. We have to agree to tax ourselves because it's the only way to create a more effective government and humane society moving forward.

Proposed tax on social media platforms in Minnesota could raise over $300M
Proposed tax on social media platforms in Minnesota could raise over $300M

Yahoo

time10-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Proposed tax on social media platforms in Minnesota could raise over $300M

Minnesota legislators are weighing a new tax on social media platforms that could raise $334 million in the next four years as the state faces a multibillion-dollar deficit later this decade and uncertainty surrounding federal funding. Under a proposal introduced by Senate Taxes Committee Chair Ann Rest, DFL-New Hope, large social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and X would pay a tax on the collection of user data, which they sell to advertisers. What lawmakers said is a first-of-its-kind state tax would be based on usership for platforms with 100,000 or more monthly users in Minnesota. It would scale up depending on the number of users on the platform, with the top bracket applying to platforms with 1 million or more users. 'For many years now, social media platforms and businesses have taken our information, our identifying information, and used it to make millions and millions of dollars,' Rest told the Senate Taxes Committee as she presented her bill on Wednesday. 'We hope we can modernize the way in which our tax systems work, recognizing the world has greatly changed.' If the new social media tax were to take effect as a part of this year's two-year state budget, it would raise about $46 million in its first year. That amount is expected to grow to more than $90 million annually in the following three years, according to an analysis by the Minnesota Department of Revenue. The Senate and House tax committees heard versions of the bill Wednesday and held it over for possible inclusion in a larger tax package bill later in the session. It could face a tough path forward in the House, where Republicans and Democrats both have 67 seats. GOP lawmakers say the state shouldn't pass any new taxes and should focus on rolling back the large expansion of spending that happened under Democratic-Farmer-Labor controlled government in 2023. Rest and other supporters who testified in favor of the new tax said it would ensure that large companies profiting off user data — which they get by providing otherwise free services — are paying their fair share in Minnesota. 'This bill proceeds from the very reasonable premise that this extraction of value should be taxed the way the extraction of many other valuable natural resources are taxed,' said University of California — Davis law professor Darien Shanske, whose work focuses on state and local tax policy. Economic disruptions and federal budget cuts caused by President Donald Trump also could mean more stress on state resources in the months and years ahead, supporters said. 'This bill is badly needed because it provides revenue that could be used to help those that will be hurt if the social safety net is shredded,' said Phillip Sandro, a retiree with health issues living on a fixed income who spoke for the progressive faith group Isaiah. Supporters also argued that negative social consequences from social media platforms, such as potential harm to younger users' mental health, warrant taxation because of the cost they pose to society. Politicians have targeted companies like Facebook parent Meta in recent years after studies showed that excessive teen social media use was tied to psychological distress. Minnesota is set to have a $456 million budget surplus in 2026-2027, but as lawmakers put together a two-year state budget this spring, a $6 billion deficit looms in the following 2028-2029 fiscal year. Early proposals from the Governor's Office, House and Senate have largely centered around billions in cuts, but Democratic-Farmer-Labor senators and representatives have left new taxes on the table. Republican Senators questioned the need for any new taxes when the state grew spending by 40% in the last budget passed in 2023, which saw state spending top $70 billion and used most of a record $18 billion budget surplus. 'The reason why the state of Minnesota is facing a $6 billion structural deficit is because of the overspending, the unsustainable spending over the last two years,' said Sen. Jeremy Miller, R-Winona. 'When you spend more than the revenue coming in, it's unsustainable; it's simple math.' Opponents also said a tax on social media platforms will hurt small businesses in the state who rely on targeted advertising to reach local and regional customers. New social media taxes would mean big companies would pass the cost along to smaller business customers, argued it would limit access to targeted ads. 'Minnesota's consumers, small businesses, retailers, family farms and even newspapers that would feel this squeeze,' said Deb Peters, a lobbyist with Americans for Digital Opportunity and the Association of National Advertisers. 'Taxing advertising, especially online, raises prices for everyone.' Business interests also noted that passing a law targeting social media with a new tax could attract legal action. The Internet Tax Freedom Act, originally passed in 1998, protects online businesses from state and local government taxes that apply only to digital commerce, wrote the Midwest branch of TechNet, a group representing technology executives. New MN office for missing, murdered Black women and girls aims to build awareness MN House bill aims to assist families with child care costs Push to release Sen. Nicole Mitchell arrest video gets new chance on appeal St. Paul nonprofit pays $7.3M to turn Bandana Square hotel into emergency shelter Minnesota health department cuts 170 jobs after federal COVID grant freeze

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