Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Where Does New York Draw the Line for Tribal Tobacco?

Indian tribes in upstate New York has begun to adopt an idea that has been around since the early 90s:  growing and selling their own tobacco, in part to evade paying tax for cigarettes.  This is a respectable move on the tribes part, but it seems difficult to draw the line at where it becomes harmful to the states tax revenue.  The perspective of the tribes is that they're simply doing what they need to do to avoid poverty and just be able to make a living.  I understand this and since these tribes are federally recognized and can sell items without tax, there does not seem to be a problem at first glance.  However, when digging deeper, it seems that this practice may become damaging to the states revenues.  Some tribes sell their cigarettes for around four dollars a pack, which is less than the tax alone when buying through a typical New York gas station or convenience store.  This loss of revenue could potentially be damaging and I think the role the government should play is something along the lines of what the Altria spokesman, David Sutton, said:  “All cigarettes sold to non-Native American New Yorkers need to be tax-paid — regardless of who manufactures them — or New York State will continue to lose legitimate and significant tax revenue, and law-abiding retailers will continue to be impacted by cigarette tax evasion.”  This makes sense and while it may seem like this fix is unnecessary or over-controlling, it seems to be the only option to prevent a significant loss in tax revenue in the future.  


Nytimes article: Link to article

4 comments:

codytonso said...

It is true that even though tribal nations sell there packs of cigarettes for around four dollars a pack. Which is less that the sales tax in New York state at a gas station. But whats the big deal so they should lower the sales tax in NY and people will still buy there cigarettes. Its not like the revenue from cigarettes taxes generates the nations only income.

Danny Mote said...

I feel like even if this was what NY wanted to do, it would not happen. Simply because they would be marked as a supporter of tobacco companies.

Wendy Williams said...

The reservations are sovereign nations and can manifacture and sell what they manufacture. What is the difference then if we tax cigarettes or a Navajo rug? Should we then also add a special tax to the Hopi's Kachina dolls? Should we also impose state income tax upon non native Americans who work on reservations? I say we need to back off. Tax legalized American grown marijuana instead. Let the Indians have their tobacco sales.

boloxi said...

Let them sell smokes. New York makes plenty of tax money already. The Indians have been screwed over long enough. Let them sell smokes on their reservations. The state and federal government should not interfere.