History of the Income Tax
in the United States
In
1913, Wyoming ratified the 16 th Amendment, providing the three-quarter
majority of states necessary to amend the Constitution. The16th
Amendment to the Constitution made the income tax a permanent
fixture in the U.S. tax system. See the
First Form 1040 From
1913.

The nation had few taxes in its early history. From 1791
to 1802, the United States government was supported by internal
taxes on distilled spirits, carriages, refined sugar, tobacco and
snuff, property sold at auction, corporate bonds, and slaves. The
high cost of the War of 1812 brought about the nation's first sales
taxes on gold, silverware, jewelry, and watches. In 1817, however,
Congress did away with all internal taxes, relying on tariffs on
imported goods to provide sufficient funds for running the government.
In 1862, in order to support the Civil War effort, Congress enacted
the nation's first income tax law. It was a forerunner of our modern
income tax in that it was based on the principles of graduated,
or progressive, taxation and of withholding income at the source.
During the Civil War, a person earning from $600 to $10,000 per
year paid tax at the rate of 3%. Those with incomes of more than
$10,000 paid taxes at a higher rate. Additional sales and excise
taxes were added, and an “inheritance” tax also made its debut.
In 1866, internal revenue collections reached their highest point
in the nation's 90-year history—more than $310 million, an amount
not reached again until 1911.
The Act of 1862 established the office of Commissioner of Internal
Revenue. The Commissioner was given the power to assess, levy,
and collect taxes, and the right to enforce the tax laws through
seizure of property and income and through prosecution. The powers
and authority remain very much the same today.
In 1868, Congress again focused its taxation efforts on tobacco
and distilled spirits and eliminated the income tax in 1872. It
had a short-lived revival in 1894 and 1895. In the latter year,
the U.S. Supreme Court decided that the income tax was unconstitutional
because it was not apportioned among the states in conformity with
the Constitution.
In 1913, Wyoming ratified the 16 th Amendment, providing the three-quarter
majority of states necessary to amend the Constitution. The16th
Amendment to the Constitution made the income tax a permanent fixture
in the U.S. tax system. The amendment gave Congress legal authority
to tax income and resulted in a revenue law that taxed incomes
of both individuals and corporations. That same year, the first
Form 1040 appeared after Congress levied a 1 percent tax on net
personal incomes above $3,000 with a 6 percent surtax on incomes
of more than $500,000.
In 1918, during World War I, the top rate of the income tax rose
to 77 percent to help finance the war effort. In fiscal year 1918,
annual internal revenue collections for the first time passed the
billion-dollar mark, rising to $5.4 billion by 1920. With the advent
of World War II, employment increased, as did tax collections—to
$7.3 billion. The withholding tax on wages was introduced in 1943
and was instrumental in increasing the number of taxpayers to 60
million and tax collections to $43 billion by 1945.
In 1981, Congress enacted the largest tax cut in U.S. history,
approximately $750 billion over six years. The tax reduction, however,
was partially offset by two tax acts, in 1982 and 1984, that attempted
to raise approximately $265 billion.
On Oct. 22, 1986, President Reagan signed into law the Tax Reform
Act of 1986, one of the most far-reaching reforms of the United
States tax system since the adoption of the income tax. The top
tax rate on individual income was lowered from 50% to 28%, the
lowest it had been since 1916. Tax preferences were eliminated
to make up most of the revenue. In an attempt to remain revenue
neutral, the act called for a $120 billion increase in business
taxation and a corresponding decrease in individual taxation over
a five-year period.
Following what seemed to be a yearly tradition of new tax acts
that began in 1986, the Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1990 was
signed into law on Nov. 5, 1990. As with the '87, '88, and '89
acts, the 1990 act, while providing a number of substantive provisions,
was small in comparison with the 1986 act. The emphasis of the
1990 act was increased taxes on the wealthy.
On Aug. 10, 1993, President Clinton signed the Revenue Reconciliation
Act of 1993 into law. The act's purpose was to reduce by approximately
$496 billion the federal deficit that would otherwise accumulate
in fiscal years 1994 through 1998. In 1997, Clinton signed another
tax act. The act, which cut taxes by $152 billion, included a cut
in capital-gains tax for individuals, a $500 per child tax credit,
and tax incentives for education.
President George W. Bush signed tax cuts into law in 2001, 2002,
2003, and 2004. The largest was the first, the Economic Growth
and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001. It was estimated to
save taxpayers $1.3 trillion over ten years, making it the third
largest tax cut since World War II, behind only the Kennedy tax
cut signed by Johnson in 1964 and the Reagan tax cut in 1981. The
Bush tax cut created a new lowest rate, 10% for the first several
thousand dollars earned. It also established a slow schedule of
incremental tax cuts that would eventually double the child tax
credit from $500 to $1,000, adjust brackets so that middle-income
couples owed the same tax as comparable singles, cut the top four
tax rates (28% to 25%; 31% to 28%; 36% to 33%; and 39.6% to 35%).
The Job Creation and Workers Assistance Act of 2002 provided tax
relief to businesses and included a 13-week extension on unemployment
insurance and tax breaks for taxpayers affected by the Sept. 11,
2001, terrorist attacks. The Jobs and Growth Tax Relief and Reconciliation
Act of 2003 accelerated the tax rate cuts that had been enacted
in 2001, and temporarily reduced the tax rate on capital gains
and dividends to 15%. In 2004, the U.S. was forced to eliminate
a corporate tax provision that had been ruled illegal by the World
Trade Organization. Along with that tax hike, Congress passed a
cornucopia of tax breaks, which for individuals included an option
to deduct the payment of whichever state taxes were higher, sales
or income taxes.
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