The Power to Tax
Should government's power to tax be limited? The events of the late 1970s in the wake of California's Proposition 13 brought this question very sharply into popular focus. Whether the power to tax should be restricted, and if so how, are issues of immediate policy significance. Providing a serious analysis of these issues, the authors of this 1980 book offer an approach to the understanding and evaluation of the fiscal system, one that yields profound implications. The central question becomes: how much 'power to tax' would the citizen voluntarily grant to government as a party to some initial social contract devising a fiscal constitution? Those in office are assumed to exploit the power assigned to them to the maximum possible extent: government is modelled as 'revenue-maximizing Leviathan'. Armed with such a model, the authors proceed to trace out the restrictions on the power to tax that might be expected to emerge from the citizen's constitutional deliberations.
Product details
November 2006Paperback
9780521027922
248 pages
229 × 152 × 14 mm
0.37kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. Taxation in constitutional perspective
- 2. Natural government: a model of Leviathan
- 3. Constraints on base and rate structure
- 4. The taxation of commodities
- 5. Taxation through time: income taxes, capital taxes, and public debt
- 6. Money creation and taxation
- 7. The disposition of public revenues
- 8. The domain of politics
- 9. Open economy, federalism, and taxing authority
- 10. Toward authentic tax reform: prospects and prescriptions
- Epilogue
- Notes
- Selected bibliography
- Index.