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Old Taxes, New Tech: What History Tells Us About AI Levies
USATuesday, July 14, 2026
In the 1930s, lawmakers sought to curb big retail chains by imposing higher taxes on each new store they opened.
The premise was simple: the more outlets a company ran, the more it should pay for that privilege.
This approach aimed to protect small local merchants and keep prices low, while also serving as an antitrust tool that made it harder for giants to dominate markets.
How the Tax Was Built
- State‑level origin: States already had experience with license taxes, so they began there.
- Early attempts failed: Initial statutes were deemed arbitrary and struck down.
- Refinement: Later laws set a threshold; every store beyond that triggered a higher rate.
- National reach factor: Some statutes tied the tax to how far a chain operated across states.
- Judicial support: The Supreme Court upheld several graduated taxes, and by the mid‑1930s 28 states had such laws.
- Extreme example: Texas’s rate was so steep that a grocery outlet could lose most of its profit, underscoring the policy’s regulatory intent.
Public and Political Reactions
| Perspective | Argument |
|---|---|
| Critics | Chains hurt communities by squeezing local suppliers and workers. |
| Supporters | Chains lower prices for consumers, benefiting shoppers. |
| Public opinion | Voters often rejected measures that seemed to raise grocery bills. |
| Case in point | California’s 1936 ballot measure was defeated by an overwhelming margin because shoppers saw the tax as unfairly targeting them. |
Takeaway
The chain‑store story shows that taxes can influence business behavior but rarely reverse a shift driven by consumer choice.
As lawmakers consider AI levies, they must weigh whether the tax will truly protect communities or merely redistribute profits, and decide what role government should play in guiding disruptive change.
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