DEFINING "PROFITS" FOR BRITISH INCOME TAX PURPOSES: A CONTEXTUAL STUDY OF THE DEPRECIATION CASES, 1875-1897

Authors
Citation
Lamb, Margaret, DEFINING "PROFITS" FOR BRITISH INCOME TAX PURPOSES: A CONTEXTUAL STUDY OF THE DEPRECIATION CASES, 1875-1897, Accounting historians journal , 29(1), 2002, pp. 105-172
ISSN journal
01484184
Volume
29
Issue
1
Year of publication
2002
Pages
105 - 172
Database
ACNP
SICI code
Abstract
Seven British income tax disputes over depreciation (1875-1897) are analyzed in this contextual study. The legal cases reveal how uncertainty over meanings for "depreciation," "profits," and "capital" reflected social and political tensions which had commercial accounting implications. Case analysis yields evidence of how judicial support reinforced the Inland Revenue's technical authority over a competing tax administration institution and enabled its modern regulatory control over taxpayers to be constructed. The British example illustrates the ways in which technical and administrative practices may emerge from the contestation of meanings that takes place both in a wide political context and within particular institutional settings.