It's an activity that uses millions of dollars in foreign exchange annually and–with the country's tight foreign exchange situation–local business groups have been lobbying the Government to crack down on it. When he presented his mid-term budget review on Friday, Finance Minister Colm Imbert announced the imposition of a seven per cent tax on online shopping.
Imbert first hinted at the tax last October during a post-budget discussion with the American Chamber of Industry and Commerce of T&T (AmChamTT) when he revealed that the then newly elected PNM Government had received proposals from the business community to introduce the measure.
In his presentation to Parliament last Friday, the minister said online purchases in US dollars put a strain on the country's foreign reserves to the tune of "US$1 million a day." He said there was precedent for a tax on online shopping from the United States and New Zealand. The measure, he said, will not only help manage the country's foreign reserves but will give local businesses a competitive advantage.
The seven per cent tax will take effect in September following discussions with banks and credit card companies, Imbert said.
Thousands of middle and upper class citizens regularly surf the net to make Internet purchases, enticed by sales and bargains which make items far cheaper than what is sold locally.
One online shopper Mala said: "The fact is that I can get what I want cheaper. I will pay for it with my credit card, send it to a US address and it will be shipped to Trinidad. I pay taxes and duties but the cost I pay is still less than the cost of the product locally."
She said she regularly purchases clothing and shoes for her family and, at Christmas time or for birthdays, she makes more high-end purchases, including electronic items.
Another online shopper, Cheryl, felt it was "unfair that the Government would want to tell me how to spend my money."
Cheryl said the seven per cent tax "is just being put to satisfy the people who helped them win the election. Is poor people like me who will be affected."
But she's wrong. It's not just people like Cheryl or Mala who will be affected. Some business people find it cheaper to purchase their stocks online. A spokesman for a local courier company that clear goods purchased online told the Business Guardian some businessmen have been making extensive use of the facility because it is cheaper. Businesses also use courier services to import medicine and other production inputs.
However, this does not mean that they don't pay taxes. They are charged duties and VAT as well as the cost for shipping. The shipping charge is calculated either by weight or the dimension of the package, which ever is greater.
Cheryl said she will now be paying tax twice.
"The goods I used to buy before I will no longer be able to afford because on top of duties, if I have to pay the additional seven per cent tax, it will be too expensive."
Courier companies have made it easier for citizens to shop online. They register for free, shop at any US Web site and the package is delivered. The shopper is provided with a US address where the goods are sent when purchased and there is online tracking. Once shipped the goods get to T&T within two to three working days.
TTPost also offers a courier service. EZone is an international private mail box service that allows customers to have their online purchases delivered to a Miami or UK address, air or sea-freighted to T&T, then delivered via TTPost.
In a statement last October, AmChamTT cautioned against an additional tax on online shopping. The business group said imposing additional taxes on online shopping would not deter it but instead "run it underground and damage a thriving industry."
AmChamTT acknowledged that "credit card purchases are a first call on our foreign exchange. The banks automatically honour any credit card purchase that is made for online shopping and it is always in a foreign currency."