$1.05 for me (Kentucy is 6%).
According to the iTunes UK site, each song in 79 pence, or 0.79 GBP. 1 GBP is approximately 1.78 USD. So 0.99 USD is .56 GBP or 56 pence. 79 pence would be 1.40 USD.
So if VAT is 17.5%, then the total should be (56p + 10p) 66 pence. The remaining 13 pence difference is a mystery, but there's two possible reasons for it that I can see.
1.) There's some kind of 'anti-copyright' tax being levied on the songs. A few countries do this on different types of media and equipment (CDs, iPods, digital cameras, etc.), though I've seen a few reports saying the UK isn't one of those countries. [
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/1120199.stm]
2.) State of California sales tax is currently 7.25% + local jurisdiction. Since Apple is located in Cupertino, the tax is 8.25%, and this might be getting placed on the purchases. It would probably happen like this:
56p + CA tax (5p) = 61p + VAT (11p) = 72p. Still trying to figure out where the remaining 7p went...possibly Uncle Sam (US GOV) taking a cut too? Or maybe it's just in there to recoup costs...who knows.
Which brings us to the cost of living difference between countries. On average, it seems like everything in the UK is 1.2 to 1.7 times more expensive than in the US. The statement about the price of the Porsche tends to agree with this. So chances are they're selling a product at a fair price concurrent with the market in that area.
If you go by #2 above, the 7p difference is a mere 0.12 USD more than we pay for a song right now; or 1.12 times as much. If you go with just having the VAT leveled on it (13p difference), then it's a 0.23 USD difference; or 1.23 times as much. Last I checked 1.12 and 1.23 times as much is a better thing than 1.2 to 1.7 times as much.
What are the prices per song for the other online music sellers in the UK? From what I've heard, it's less than the iTMS prices. If that's so, what exactly is the problem here? It's already been established that living in the UK costs more than some of the other places in the world (US included), so you can't logically expect to pay the same price for something a person in the US might.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tm...40915/wr_nm/media_music_apple_dc&sid=95573661
Targeting iTunes is an odd choice. In Britain, Apple's music service is cheaper -- in some cases more than 20 percent cheaper -- than rivals Napster (news - web sites) and most of the online retailers that resell the catalog of music download firm OD2.