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Taxing questions

New Library World

ISSN: 0307-4803

Article publication date: 1 March 1985

230

Abstract

Taxes inevitably express, however crudely, some system of social values or order of priorities. Our reaction to the possibility of a tax on books springs from our gut feeling that “books are different” and not taxing them, even when as a nation we're supposed to be looking at every penny, is somehow a sign of a superior civilisation. That feeling helped to prevent VAT's fore‐runner, purchase tax, being slapped on books in 1940 in order to help pay for a rather large war. Having tax free books gave me the retort obvious to a French colleague joyfully grumbling at our Puritan tax on that incontestable glory of Gallic culture — the wines of France from the Grands Crus to the Lesser Languedocs: we, unlike the French, did not tax that stimulant of the mind, the book.

Citation

(1985), "Taxing questions", New Library World, Vol. 86 No. 3, pp. 43-44. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb038626

Publisher

:

MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1985, MCB UP Limited

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