So, out of curiosity, what would this mean to me? Please check my math and LMK if I am looking at this correctly.
Let's start with an $8 MSRP cigar, today. So, before the tax, the cigar retail price was $6.34. Tax on this cigar would be $3.36, but with the cap it would be $3. So the new cost of the cigar would be $9.34.
Does that look correct? TIA.
I'm not quite sure
why you list a MSRP of $8 and a retail of $6.34. Here is how I read this as it applies to you a resident of Idaho.
Assuptions are that Wholesale is 50% of retail and retail is MSRP, Idaho state tobacco tax is 40% of wholesale,
Federal tax will be driven by MSRP not shelf pricing.
As it stands today:
Retail price...8
State tax...1.6
federal tax....05 (current cap)
total $9.65 before local sales tax
If the cap increases
retail price...8
state tax...1.6
federal tax...3
total $12.60 before local sales tax
You answer your own question; Federal tax will be dictated by MSRP. That was the assumption I made. It didn't seem to make sense if the tax would be dictated by floor pricing as that would continuously change when you start adding taxes....
You don't take into consideration that there is already a 20.79% tax in place, so in order to find the increase I took away the 20.79% federal tax and then applied the 52.988% federal tax. Or at least, that is what I was trying to do. I guess I was assuming that the federal tax was already included today in MSRP.
I am trying to see what would change in the base price of a cigar with out any influence from a state's tax structure, so I didn't apply the Idaho tax; although you are correct, it is 40% of the wholesale price. Maybe a current cigar retailer could shed a little light on how the current federal tax is applied to cigars?
About the floor tax you mention, it seems that it would depend on whether or not the tax is assessed at POS, which I believe it is. Which would mean that the alleged $52,988 tax bill would only get paid as cigars sold. However, your $52,988 number is incorrect as it does not take into consideration the $3 cap. My previous calculation at least shows that even a $6 cigar would incur the $3 cap. So it would be more close to accurate to say that the number of cigars X $3 would be the total floor tax from the bill.