Business and Occupation Tax. Washington's major business tax is the business and occupation (B&O) tax. The B&O tax is imposed on the gross receipts of business activities conducted within the state, without any deduction for the costs of doing business. Businesses must pay the B&O tax even though they may not have any profits or may be operating at a loss. A taxpayer may have more than one B&O tax rate, depending on the types of activities conducted. Major B&O tax rates are 0.471 percent for retailing; 0.484 percent for manufacturing, wholesaling, and extracting; and depending on the size of the business as determined by gross income, either 1.5 or 1.75 percent for services and activities not classified elsewhere. Several preferential rates as well as increased rates or surcharges also apply to specific business activities.
Business and Occupation Taxation for Newspapers. Printing and publishing is subject to a preferential state B&O tax rate of 0.35 percent. This reduced rate applies to advertising and subscription revenue generated by print and digital newspapers. The preference is available to any business producing materials that meet the statutory definition of newspaper. It is not available for online newspapers that do not have a print version. The preferential tax rate expires July 1, 2024, at which point a tax rate of 0.484 percent will apply. Printing and publishing businesses must file an annual tax preference performance report with the Department of Revenue detailing wages and employment of the business as well as tax savings from the preferential tax rate.
Under current law, newspaper means:
Tax Preference Review Requirements. State law provides a range of tax preferences that confer reduced tax liability upon a designated class of taxpayer. Tax preferences include tax exclusions, deductions, exemptions, preferential tax rates, deferrals, and credits. Legislation that establishes or expands a tax preference must include a tax preference performance statement (TPPS) that identifies the public policy objective of the preference, as well as specific metrics the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee (JLARC) can use to review the effectiveness of the preference in achieving its stated public policy objectives. Tax preferences must be reviewed by JLARC at least once every ten years, unless state statute requires otherwise. All new tax preferences automatically expire after ten years unless an alternative expiration date is provided or the tax preference is exempt from expiration. To assist the Legislature in its evaluation of economic development-related tax preferences, taxpayer beneficiaries are required to file annual tax preference performance reports detailing wages and employment of the taxpayer as well as tax savings from the tax preference.
The preferential B&O tax rate of 0.35 percent for printing and publishing newspapers is replaced with a complete B&O tax deduction. Beginning January 1, 2024, a business may deduct all amounts received from activities related to printing or publishing a newspaper.
The B&O tax deduction is extended to publishing eligible digital content if the person reported under the printing and publishing tax classification beginning January 1, 2008, for a printed version of the publication. Eligible digital content means a publication that is published at regularly stated intervals of at least once per month.
In cases where a publisher charges a single, non-variable amount to advertise in, subscribe to, or access content in both a printed and electronic publication, the entire amount of the charge is deductible.
The B&O tax deduction does not apply to amounts received from cooperative advertising or similar cost sharing between a manufacturer, distributor, or seller of products. The deduction must be reduced by an amount equal to the value of any political advertising or similar expenditure made by the business during the tax reporting period.
The B&O tax deduction expires January 1, 2035.
A TPPS is included that states a specific public policy objective of protecting and supporting local journalism. JLARC is required to review the B&O tax deduction. If the review finds that deduction accomplishes its goal of supporting local journalism across the state, measured by retaining 75 percent of journalism jobs, local newspapers, and community-focused online news outlets based in Washington as of December 31, 2022, or if a review finds the tax deduction enables locally based journalism outlets to continue to exist when compared to states that did not provide similar tax incentives, then a legislative presumption is created that the 2035 expiration date should be extended.
The applicability of the tax deduction is narrowed to include persons that are either currently printing or publishing a newspaper or have claimed the preferential rate since 2008 and only publish online. The definition of “eligible digital content” is narrowed to include persons that publish monthly or more frequently. The deduction is narrowed so that it does not apply to amounts received by persons from cooperative advertising or similar cost sharing between a manufacturer, distributor, or seller of products.
The deduction is reduced when a person that makes an expenditure—as defined in the campaign disclosure and contribution statutes—during the tax reporting period in an amount that is equal to the value of expenditures made during the tax reporting period.
The committee recommended a different version of the bill than what was heard. PRO: The local news industry is having a very difficult time. The goal of the legislation is not to quintuple the size of the tax preference, we are trying to assist these companies. The rate will go up if the preference does expire next year, and we have to do something. Local journalism provides a unique and important role in our communities. Fact based information on local issues are very important. There has been a dramatic change in the last ten years. There are a lot more empty chairs than there used to be in newsrooms. Advocates want to bring the tax credit preference down to zero, and this step recognizes the urgency of the industry. Everything we hold dear is dependent on this industry. Local journalism is essential to our democracy, and it is extremely expensive to produce. This bill will save tens of thousands of dollars for the Columbian. The decline in advertising has led to the decline of many newspapers, such as the Tacoma News Tribune. Local newspapers are vital to our communities. They publish legal notices and let us know what is happening in our communities. Many communities are losing their newspapers. There are a lot of news deserts across the country. When newspapers go away, public participation goes way down. Employment is down over 30 percent over the years. No one covers any of the 17 school districts in Pierce County. No journalist is assigned to the press corps. We've upset the entire applecart of Democracy by allowing local journalism to go by the wayside. We should not tax something that is struggling to survive. Journalism needs a boost anywhere it can.
OTHER: The League of Women Voters completed a study on how the decline of journalism is having an impact on our democracy.