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Neighboring sales tax holidays might affect S.C.

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Posted 8:06AM on Monday 22nd July 2002 ( 22 years ago )
COLUMBIA, S.C. - South Carolina retailers along the state&#39;s borders will see fewer purchases during the sales tax holiday this year because North Carolina and Georgia are holding a similar break the same weekend, analysts say.<br> <br> But South Carolina&#39;s package is broader and does not have price caps on certain items like Georgia and North Carolina, state Merchants Association president Jim Hatchell said.<br> <br> Still, businesses are preparing for less demand.<br> <br> &#34;It&#39;s really going to kill sales in Rock Hill,&#34; said Maxine Huntley, a manager with clothing store Fashion Bug in Rock Hill, which sits close to the North Carolina border.<br> <br> &#34;Last year during the tax holiday, this store got shoppers from Charlotte, Concord and all over North Carolina, and we had sales of $15,000 on Saturday alone, where normally we would do $4,000 to $5,000 of business,&#34; she said.<br> <br> This will be North Carolina&#39;s first sales tax holiday, Georgia&#39;s second and South Carolina&#39;s third. During Georgia&#39;s break in March, people from South Carolina headed south for the sales.<br> <br> &#34;We actually had people going from Aiken down to Augusta, to our other store, to make purchases,&#34; said Chuck Brown, manager of Computer Exchange in Aiken.<br> <br> Even without competing tax holidays, South Carolina store owners would have seen business drop, said Deborah Fowler, director of the Center for Retailing at the University of South Carolina.<br> <br> &#34;There&#39;s a nationwide trend that shows sales during the tax-free holidays decrease each year,&#34; she said. &#34;For example, the first year people went out and bought computers, but most families don&#39;t buy computers every year, so sales tend to decline.&#34;<br> <br> Consumers saved $3.6 million in sales tax in 2000 and $2.7 million last year, according to the state Revenue Department.<br> <br> It&#39;s impossible to know how many shoppers came to South Carolina from North Carolina and Georgia the last two years, but the number was sizable, Fowler said.<br> <br> &#34;Driving from Augusta to North Augusta or from Charlotte to Rock Hill was no big deal,&#34; she said. &#34;But now, with North Carolina and Georgia doing it as well, there&#39;s no reason for people to cross the border.&#34;<br> <br> Hatchell said in Georgia and North Carolina, clothing items and footwear costing more than $100 are not sales-tax exempt. Georgia will not tax the first $1,500 of the sales price of a personal computer and related items while North Carolina exempts the first $3,500 during the holiday.<br> <br>

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