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Hat tax

The hat tax,[1] or hat duty, was a tax levied by the British Government from 1784 to 1811 on men's hats. The tax was introduced during the first ministry of Pitt the Younger and was designed to be a simple way of raising revenue for the government in a rough accordance with each person's relative wealth. It was supposed that the rich would have a large number of expensive hats, whereas the poor might have one cheap hat or none at all.

The hat tax required hat retailers to buy a licence and to display the sign Dealer in Hats by Retail. The cost of the retail licence was two pounds for London and five shillings elsewhere. Each man's hat was required to have a revenue stamp pasted inside on its lining.

The cost of the duty depended on the cost of the hat. For hats costing under four shillings, a duty of threepence was paid. For hats costing between four and seven shillings, sixpence was levied, and a shilling for those between seven and twelve shillings. For expensive hats over twelve shillings, the duty was two shillings. Heavy fines were given to anyone, milliner or hat wearer, who failed to pay the hat tax. However, the death penalty was reserved for forgers of hat-tax revenue stamps.

The hat tax was not the only duty raised by the government on household items. The best known such tax was the window tax, which was implemented in 1697, and was not repealed until 1851. Other similar taxes were the dice duty (1711–1862), almanac tax (1711–1834), wallpaper tax (1712–1836), brick tax (1784–1850), glove tax (1785–94), hair-powder tax (1786–1869) and perfume tax (1786–1800).

Although these twenty-seven years saw rapid inflation, a shilling of that period had the purchasing power of about £3.40 today.

References edit

  1. ^ Rogers, Ruth Reinstein (January 1983). "La Bonnet-Rouge: or – John Bull Evading the Hat Tax". Journal of the History of Economic Thought. 4 (2): 20–21. doi:10.1017/S104277160000051X. ISSN 2163-2049.

External links edit

  • Top 10 Truly Bizarre Taxes

this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, december, 2023, learn, when. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Hat tax news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message The hat tax 1 or hat duty was a tax levied by the British Government from 1784 to 1811 on men s hats The tax was introduced during the first ministry of Pitt the Younger and was designed to be a simple way of raising revenue for the government in a rough accordance with each person s relative wealth It was supposed that the rich would have a large number of expensive hats whereas the poor might have one cheap hat or none at all The hat tax required hat retailers to buy a licence and to display the sign Dealer in Hats by Retail The cost of the retail licence was two pounds for London and five shillings elsewhere Each man s hat was required to have a revenue stamp pasted inside on its lining The cost of the duty depended on the cost of the hat For hats costing under four shillings a duty of threepence was paid For hats costing between four and seven shillings sixpence was levied and a shilling for those between seven and twelve shillings For expensive hats over twelve shillings the duty was two shillings Heavy fines were given to anyone milliner or hat wearer who failed to pay the hat tax However the death penalty was reserved for forgers of hat tax revenue stamps The hat tax was not the only duty raised by the government on household items The best known such tax was the window tax which was implemented in 1697 and was not repealed until 1851 Other similar taxes were the dice duty 1711 1862 almanac tax 1711 1834 wallpaper tax 1712 1836 brick tax 1784 1850 glove tax 1785 94 hair powder tax 1786 1869 and perfume tax 1786 1800 Although these twenty seven years saw rapid inflation a shilling of that period had the purchasing power of about 3 40 today References edit Rogers Ruth Reinstein January 1983 La Bonnet Rouge or John Bull Evading the Hat Tax Journal of the History of Economic Thought 4 2 20 21 doi 10 1017 S104277160000051X ISSN 2163 2049 External links editTop 10 Truly Bizarre Taxes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hat tax amp oldid 1190039320, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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