1. The Family as Tax Dodge: Partnership, Individuality, and Gender in the Personal Income Tax Act, 1942 to 1970.
- Author
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TILLOTSON, SHIRLEY
- Subjects
- *
INCOME tax laws , *DOMESTIC relations , *TAX exemption , *TAX rates , *TAX evasion ,CANADIAN economy ,CANADIAN history, 1914-1945 - Abstract
To pay for the Second World War, the federal government had to tax more Canadians more heavily. In 1942, the amount of tax-exempt personal income was reduced and the rates of taxation were increased. The public responded with perplexity and concern about how the newly taxable, often low-income Canadians were going to pay their taxes. In these protests, and over the course of the next thirty years, the treatment in tax law of individuals as members of families was a focus of debate and changing legal accommodation. Issues such as alimony, family maintenance payments, dependants' deductions, and family businesses presented the tax authorities with puzzles about how to collect an adequate public revenue in ways consistent with common sense beliefs about family relationships. The problem remains unsolved in income tax law because there are conflicting beliefs about and interests at stake in the economic and social meanings of family relationships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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