Window tax

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The window tax was a glass tax which was a significant social, cultural, and architectural force in the kingdoms of England, Scotland and then Great Britain during the 17th and 18th centuries. Some houses from the period can be seen to have bricked-up windows, as a result of the tax.

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[edit] Details

The tax was introduced in 1696 under King William III[1] and was designed to impose tax relative to the prosperity of the taxpayer, but without the controversy that then surrounded the idea of income tax. At that time, many people in Britain opposed income tax, on principle, because they believed that the disclosure of personal income represented an unacceptable government intrusion into private matters, and a potential threat to personal liberty.[citation needed] In fact the first British income tax was not introduced until the late 18th century and the issue remained intensely controversial well into the 19th century.[2]

When the window tax was introduced, it consisted of two parts: a flat-rate house tax of 2 shillings per house and a variable tax for the number of windows above ten windows. Properties with between ten and twenty windows paid a total of four shillings, and those above twenty windows paid eight shillings.[3] The number of windows that incurred tax was changed to seven in 1766 and eight in 1825. The flat-rate tax was changed to a variable rate, dependent on the property value, in 1778. People who were ineligible for church or poor rates, for reasons of poverty, were exempt from the window tax.[4] Window tax was relatively unintrusive and easy to assess. The bigger the house, the more windows it was likely to have, and the more tax the occupants would pay. Nevertheless, the tax was unpopular, because it was seen by some as a tax on "light and air".[5]

In Scotland this Window Tax was imposed by William Pitt the Younger in the 1780s in the financial district in Edinburgh[citation needed] and to this day "Pitt's Pictures" (blacked out windows with white painted cross-frames) can be seen in Charlotte Square.[citation needed]

A similar tax existed in France from 1798 to 1926, the Doors And Windows Tax.[citation needed]

The richest families in the kingdoms used this tax to set themselves apart from the merely rich. They would commission a country home or a manor house whose architecture would make the maximum possible use of windows. In extreme cases they would have windows built over structural walls. It was an exercise in ostentation, spurred by the window tax.[citation needed]

The tax was not repealed until 1851,[6] when it was replaced by House Duty.[7]

[edit] Origin of the phrase "daylight robbery"

Some allege that the term "daylight robbery" originated from this tax. However, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, the phrase daylight robbery was first recorded in 1949, many years after the "window tax", which places doubt upon the claim.[8][9]. However, the phrase originates from at least 1916, when it was mentioned in Harold Brighouse’s play Hobson's Choice.[10]

[edit] Contemporary references

It has been suggested that a luxury tax on window size could make new houses more energy efficient, the argument being that more efficient windows only encourage people to install bigger windows by the principle of waste homeostasis.[11]

[edit] Computer reference

For more details on this topic, see Criticism of Microsoft#Licensing agreements.

The term is also used in computer market (sometimes referenced as "Microsoft tax"), claiming that all major computers vendors, sell their products with Microsoft Windows OEM pre-installed, and Linux users will pay for those licenses and cannot buy a computer without paying to Microsoft. However, there have been recent reports of Linux users using the terms of the Microsoft End User License Agreement to obtain a refund of this "tax".[citation needed]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Herber, Mark D (1997). Ancestral Trails: The complete guide to British genealogy and family history. Sutton Publishing Ltd. ISBN 0-7509-1418-1.  p.416
  2. ^ HM Revenue & Customs "Nicholas Vansittart was Chancellor when Napoleon was defeated [in 1815]. His inclination was to maintain some tax on income, but public sentiment and the opposition were against him. A year after Waterloo, income tax was repealed ‘with a thundering peal of applause’ and Parliament decided that all documents connected with it should be collected, cut into pieces and pulped."
  3. ^ Wolverhampton Archives
  4. ^ Herber p.416
  5. ^ Request for window tax exemption, 1765
  6. ^ Request for window tax exemption, 1765
  7. ^ Wolverhampton Archives
  8. ^ http://www.worldwidewords.org/qa/qa-day1.htm
  9. ^ http://www.takeourword.com/
  10. ^ http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext04/hbsnc10.txt
  11. ^ Potter, Andrew (2007), "Planet-friendly design? Bah, humbug.", MacLean's 120 (5): 14, <http://www.macleans.ca>
de:Fenstersteuer

eo:Fenestra imposto fr:Impôt sur les portes et fenêtres io:Imposto pri la pordi e fenestri hu:Ablakadó sv:Dörr och fönsterskatt

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