A Stamp Act is a law enacted by a government that requires tax to be paid on the transfer of certain documents such as property deeds. Those that had paid the tax received an official stamp on their documents. The tax raised, called stamp duty, was first devised in the Netherlands in 1624 after a public competition to find a new form of tax. A variety of products have been covered by Stamp Acts including playing cards, patent medicines, cheques, mortgages, contracts and newspapers. The items often have to be physically stamped at approved government offices following payment of the duty although methods involving annual payment of a fixed sum or purchase of adhesive stamps are more practical and common.
Stamp Acts are in force in many countries including Australia, Bhutan, Canada, Ireland, Malaysia, Israel, the United Kingdom and the United States of America.
Stamp Duties are the oldest tax still raised by the Inland Revenue.
The duty ranged between 1 penny to shillings on a number of different legal documents including insurance policies, documents used as evidence in courts, grants of honour, grants of probate and letters of administration. It raised around £50,000 a year and although it was initially a temporary measure, it proved so successful that its use was continued.
The poet William Wordsworth worked as Distributor of Stamps for Westmorland from this time until his death. Little is known of his official activities, but it seems from a government report that he was in charge of a large area and was prompt in the performance of his duties.
In the 1830s men such as Henry Hetherington, James Watson, John Cleave, George Julian Harne and James O'Brien joined Richard Carlile in fighting against what they called a 'tax on knowledge'. The men were often persecuted, being arrested and punished for contravention of the Act. Sales of unstamped newspapers were vastly higher than legal news sources such as The Times.
Three laws relating to Stamp Duty were passed in this year:
The Finance Act 1986 introduced Stamp Duty Reserve Tax. From 27 October 1986 the charge was imposed on 'closing' transactions at the London Stock Exchange which until then had been transactions where no document was used and therefore exempt from Stamp Duty.
A public display of Stamp Office artefacts and records was held at the Courtauld Institute in 1994 to commemorate the Three hundredth anniversary of the introduction of UK Stamp Duty. The Stamp Office was also awarded the Charter Mark by John Major's Advisory Committee as a reward for its public service.
The Finance Act 1999 consolidated much Stamp Act law into a single document. Today it yields more than £1 billion every year to the Treasury.
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"Stamp Act".
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