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Emergency Internal Revenue Tax Act

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The Emergency Internal Revenue Tax Act of 1914 (H.R. 18891) renewed many of the excise taxes introduced by the Spanish–American War Revenue Act in 1898, including a federal telephone tax. It was introduced by the United States Congress in response to World War I, which had reduced international trade and hence the tax revenue collected from U.S. corporations, while also increasing the amount of federal spending. Originally set to expire on December 31, 1915, the taxes mandated by the 1914 Act were extended for another year through a joint resolution in Congress on December 17, 1915.

Background

In 1878, a federal telephone excise tax was introduced as a "war tax" to help pay for the Spanish–American War, but was repealed in 1902. In 1914, it was reinstated as part of the Emergency Internal Revenue Tax Act, after President Wilson called on Congress to raise an additional $100 million due to World War I.

The act taxed legacies and inherited personal property on a graduated scale according to the size of the estate and the degree of relationship to the deceased (surviving husbands and wives received a general exemption). A maximum rate of 15% applied to bequests from estates valued over $1 million to distant relatives, non-relatives, or "bodies politic or corporate." The act also included an excise on receipts in excess of $200,000 assessed to firms in the petroleum and sugar refining industries.It raised stamp rates, and it placed a .01 cent tax on every telephone call costing more than .15 cents.

On December 17, 1915, Congress voted to extend the tax through December 31, 2016, but the Revenue Act of 1916 in September of that year discontinued the telephone tax.

References

  1. ^ Talley, Louis Allan (January 4, 2001). "The Federal Excise Tax on Telephone Service: A History" (PDF). Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress. CRS Report for Congress. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  2. ^ Kagan, Julie (December 31, 2020). "Federal Telephone Excise Tax: What It is, How It Works". Investopedia. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
United States federal taxation legislation
Internal
Revenue
Tariffs


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