ABSTRACT

First published in 1919, Taxation in the New State explores the practical application of tax policy to the financial situation of post-World War I Britain. Hobson assesses policy according to the tax payer’s ability to bear the burden and draws a distinction between ‘cost’ and ‘surplus’. He proposes a number of reforms and considers the pitfalls of attempting the find required revenue using ordinary taxation in a post-war financial crisis.

part I|143 pages

Principles Of Tax Reform

chapter I|10 pages

Ability to Pay

chapter II|33 pages

The Taxable Surplus

chapter III|33 pages

The Shifting of Taxes

chapter IV|16 pages

The Taxation of Income

chapter V|15 pages

Reforms of Income-Tax

chapter VI|9 pages

Death Duties

chapter VII|9 pages

Supplementary Taxes

chapter VIII|17 pages

Tariffs for Revenue

part II|110 pages

Emergency Finance

chapter I|20 pages

Our Financial Emergency

chapter II|22 pages

A Levy on War-Made Wealth

chapter |3 pages

Taxation of War-Made Capital in Germany

chapter III|40 pages

A General Levy Upon Capital

chapter IV|25 pages

Relations of Imperial to Local Taxation