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Just taxes : the politics of taxation in Britain, 1914-1979
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ISBN: 9780521039796 0521814006 0521039797 1107316081 1107321476 1107317940 0511550022 1107317045 1107315107 129939924X 9780521814003 9780511550027 9781107321472 1107133475 1139809784 9781107317048 9781107133471 9781139809788 9781107316089 9781107317949 9781107315105 Year: 2002 Publisher: Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press,

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Abstract

In 1914, taxation was about 10 per cent of GNP; by 1979, taxes had risen to almost half of the total national income, and contributed to the rise of Thatcher. Martin Daunton continues the story begun in Trusting Leviathan, offering an analysis of the politics of acceptance of huge tax rises after the First World War and asks why it did not provoke the same levels of discontent in Britain as it did on the continent. He further questions why acceptance gave way to hostility at the end of this period. Daunton views taxes as the central driving force for equity or efficiency. As such he provides a detailed discussion of their potential in providing revenue for the state, and their use in shaping the social structure and influencing economic growth. Just Taxes places taxation in its proper place, at the centre of modern British history.

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