Why would governments do such a thing? To kill spam, save bandwidth, and make a ton of money.
As this Prospect article explains, between 70 and 90 percent of the world's 210 billion daily emails is spam. If we levied a 3 cent tax a day -- assuming you send an average of 100 messages a day -- you would pay $3 a day. So, more than a Starbucks coffee, and less than a Starbucks anything else. On the bright side for us, as Tom Kuntz writes, $150,000-a-week tax could finally end that wacky spam poetry from male enhancement spammers. One the bright side for governments, a three-cent tax on 200 billion emails would net 6 billion dollars.
Like other excise taxes, the Edward Gosseman points out, this would be regressive (not to mention ungoldly unpopular!), but the savings could be recouped by the falling price of broadband. At the very least, they would carve out more space for our increasing demand for broadband as we use more video streaming and data transfer.
What would be the effects of an email tax? I'm not sure it would make such a big difference. To save my daily pennies, I know I would lean more on Gchat or other instant message programs, and I'm sure everybody else would too. Especially since Google keeps a searchable "record" of Gchats, it wouldn't be an awful transition. People would think of emails more like texts -- transfers of information that they know cost money. The government could even price emails like phone plans, where you can charge by the email or pay a lump sum for a cap. A cap and trade for email! Well, let's not get ahead of ourselves.Finally, on the subject of spam killing, I ask you to consider the entirely unserious implications for the spam-based economy of Koy4Goff.
Spam Crackdown Threatens Koy4Goff's Penis Enlarger, Free iPod Industry










Which is why taxing e-mail will fail.
I'm a little confused. Are you saying that taxing email to weed out spammers will actually empower spammers to topple tech giants and small grandmothers?
no he's saying that spammers don't send email from their own computers or isp's. They hijack other people's computers and send spam from there, while also forging email headers to change the "From" address.
Here we go. A Slashdot article from 2003. The comments lay out some of the issues with an e-mail tax:
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/11/19/1357235&mode=thread&tid=103&tid=111&tid=126&tid=99
There's some precendent. The Entire english commonwealth has stamp duties on paper used in transactions. For example, if you lease property, enter into a contract, etc in India the paper must have a stamp, and the stamp costs a duty *you can't just print & sign and call it enforceable). Each physical stock certificate is subject to stamp duty in the UK.
Applying it to personal communications is a little nutty in my estimation. Google or ATT would be thrilled to pay tax collector, because they'd have an excuse to set up a per-email accounting system that they can piggy back and assess charges.