储蓄的双重征税:意大利辩论再审视

The Double Taxation of Savings: The Italian Debate Revisited

History of Political Economy · 2013
被引 9
人大 A-ABS 2

中文导读

回顾了1912至1942年间意大利关于储蓄双重征税的学术辩论,分析其与英美文献的差异,并从历史视角梳理主要论点,适合研究税收理论和经济思想史的学者。

Abstract

The statement that taxing earned income implies that saved income is taxed more than consumed income is usually credited to John Stuart Mill and was championed by Irving Fisher, even though, in the first half of the twentieth century, international doctrine never accepted it, save for Alfred Marshall and A. C. Pigou. In Italy the double taxation of savings was endorsed by Luigi Einaudi and was the object of heated debate among Italian public finance scholars. The expenditure tax should have followed from the theorem of double taxation as a corollary, and indeed, it was proposed by Einaudi and revived by Nicholas Kaldor in 1955. The present article is dedicated to examining the crucial aspects of the Italian debate on the double taxation of savings, which lasted from 1912 to 1942, with the aim, first, of highlighting its peculiarity and specificity with respect to the previous English-language literature, and second, of analyzing from a historiographical perspective the main reasoning put forward in the debate.

双重征税储蓄支出税意大利财政学