Dimensions of Law in the Service of Order
Origins of the Federal Income Tax, 1861-1913
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:16th Sep '93
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A sophisticated and accessible application of the newest theoretical work in public-policy history and legal studies, this book is a detailed account of how a permanent income tax was enacted into law in the United States. The tax originated as an apology for the aggressive manipulation of other forms of taxation, especially the tariff, during the Civil War. Levied with very low rates on a small proportion of the population and raising little revenue, the early tax was designed to preserve imbalances in the structure of wealth and opportunity, rather than to ameliorate or abolish them, by strengthening the status quo against fundamental attacks by the political left and right. This book shows that the early course of income taxation was more clearly the product of centrist ideological agreement, despite occasional divergences, than of "conservative-liberal" allocative conflict.
"A tour de force. Stanley's book will not only force a long overdue revision of the traditional understanding of the democratic origins of the income tax; more broadly, it represents one of the most fully developed, sophisticated, and clearly articulated applications of the newest theoretical work in both legal history and the study of public policy. He adds a vital symbolic dimension to income tax advocacy that is well-grounded in an understanding of economic relations."--Mark Leff, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
ISBN: 9780195058482
Dimensions: 162mm x 237mm x 27mm
Weight: 739g
352 pages