Dictionary Definition
excise n : a tax that is measured by the amount
of business done (not on property or income from real estate) [syn:
excise
tax]
Verb
1 remove by erasing or crossing out; "Please
strike this remark from the record" [syn: strike, expunge]
2 levy an excise tax on
3 remove by cutting; "The surgeon excised the
tumor"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology 1
Pronunciation
- /ˈɛkˌsaɪz/, /"Ek%saIz/
Noun
Derived terms
Quotations
- 1755, Samuel Johnson, A Dictionary of the English Language --
definition of "excise":
- A hateful tax levied upon commodities, and adjudged not by the common judges of property, but wretches hired by those to whom Excise is paid.
- 1787, Constitution of the United States of America
- The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises, to pay the debts, and provide for the common defence and general welfare of the United States;
Verb
- to impose an excise tax on something
Verb
- to cut out, to remove
- 1901, Andrew Lang, Preface to the second edition of Myth,
Ritual, and Religion
- In revising the book I ... have excised certain passages which, as the book first appeared, were inconsistent with its main thesis.
- 1846, William Youatt, The Dog
- Warts on the eyelids sometimes make their appearance; they may be lifted up with the forceps, and excised with a knife or scissors, and the wound touched with nitrate of silver.
- 1901, Andrew Lang, Preface to the second edition of Myth,
Ritual, and Religion
Related terms
Translations
to cut out, to remove
- Greek: εκτέμνω (ektemno)
Extensive Definition
Excise or Excise tax (sometimes called an excise
duty),
is a type of tax charged on
goods produced within the country (as opposed to customs
duties, charged on goods from outside the country).
Definition
Excise duty is a tax levied on the producer of certain goods, commodities and activities. It is
a separate tax from VAT, and is different
from it in that VAT solely affects the consumer (although,
naturally, the consumer also indirectly pays the excise, as it is
included in the eventual sale price of the product). The excise
duty can account for as much as half the price of the goods subject
to it, and sometimes more.
The Oxford
Dictionary gives the origin of the word to be the Dutch
accijns, itself presumed to originate from the Latin accensare -
"to tax".
What is interesting about excise tax is how vague
it actually is - it would be difficult, if at all possible, to find
a precise definition explaining what it is that categorizes goods
subject to excise tax. Lists of such goods are readily provided by
governments, and it is possible to guess at what might be the
motive for grouping such goods together; however, no explicit,
formal definition is provided:
- HM Revenue & Customs, for example, lists the following items, activities and general areas as being subject to excise duty:
- "alcohol,
environmental taxes, gambling, holdings &
movements, hydrocarbon oil, money
laundering, refunds of
duty, revenue trader’s records, tobacco duty, and visiting
forces" http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/briefs/excise-duty/index.htm
- but provides no further explanation as to what links these to one another;
- the Australian government says that:
- "Excise duty is a tax levied on certain types of goods produced or manufactured in Australia" http://www.ato.gov.au/businesses/content.asp?doc=/content/52152.htm;
- the New Oxford English Dictionary says the same thing:
- "a tax levied on certain goods and commodities produced or sold
within a country and on licenses granted for certain activities"
(revised second edition, 2005)
- but, again, no further explanation is provided as to what the word "certain" stands for.
Contrasting these official explanations to the
two scholars' remarks below on the issue of excise provides some
insight into what the original motive for the tax might have
been:
- Adam Smith says that -
- "The motive for the implementation of excise should be nothing more than to curb the pursuit of goods and services harmful to our health and morals";
- Samuel Johnson, meanwhile, is somewhat more harsh in his 1755 dictionary -
- "Excise - A hateful tax levied on commodities, and adjudged not by the common judges of property, but wretches hired by those to whom excise is paid."
Looking at the types of goods, services and areas listed as
excisable by many governments, and considering the thinkers'
comments, we are led to the conclusion that excise duty was
originally invented for some or all of the following reasons:
- to protect people –
- from harming their health by abusing substances such as tobacco and alcohol, thus making excise a kind of sumptuary tax;
- from harming themselves and others indirectly and morally by engaging in activities such as gambling and prostitution (see below) (including soliciting and pimping) – thus making it a type of vice tax or sin tax;
- from harming those around them and the general environment, both from overuse of the abovementioned substances, and including curbing activities contributing to pollution (hence the tax on hydrocarbon oil and of other environmental taxes, as in the UK), or from harming the natural environment (hence the tax on hunting) - thus also making excise a kind of pigovian tax.
- to provide monies needed –
- for the extra healthcare and other public expenditures which will be needed as a direct or indirect result of excisable activities, such as lung cancer from smoking or road accidents resulting from drink-driving;
- for defense - including taxation directly levied on other countries' militaries and/or governments, such as the UK's taxation on "visiting forces".
-
- This latter area can go wrong if unwisely implemented: a demonstrative situation arose in 2006 around central London's congestion charge (which, although not strictly branded as an excise tax, is a sort of environmental tax, as part of its aim is to reduce pollution in busy central London), where several foreign embassies got in a heated exchange with Greater London Council for refusing to pay the charge arguing that, as diplomatic entities, they were exempt from paying it.
- to punish –
- many US states impose taxes on drugs, and the UK government imposes excise on money laundering and on "visiting forces" (which can, from a legal standpoint, also be interpreted as "invading forces"). These are, clearly, not included in the statute books because the government expects smugglers, launderers and invaders to pay for the right to conduct their harmful and illegal activities, but so that greater punishments and reparations/war reparations - based mainly around tax evasion - can be imposed in the case that the perpetrator is caught and tried. Aside from the extra revenue, this of course can also act as a deterrant.
Additional Areas Covered by Excise
Drugs
As already mentioned, many US states tax drugs,
partly in order to be able to impose heavier punishments, as the
Kansas
Department of Revenue states on its website:
- "The fact that dealing marijuana and controlled substances is illegal does not exempt it from taxation. Therefore drug dealers are required by law to purchase drug tax stamps." http://www.ksrevenue.org/perstaxtypesdrug.htm
There are at least two major criticisms of such
legislation, however - see
below.
Gambling
Gambling licences are subject to excise in many
countries; however gambling itself was for a time also subject to
taxation, in the form of stamp duty,
whereby a revenue
stamp had to be placed on the ace of
spades in every pack of
cards to demonstrate that the duty had been paid (hence the
elaborate designs that evolved on this card in many packs as a
result). Since stamp duty was originally only meant to be applied
to documents (and
cards were categorized as such), the fact that dice were also subject to stamp
duty (and were in fact the only non-paper item listed under the
1765
Stamp Act) suggests that its implementation to cards and dice
can be viewed as a type of excise duty on gambling.
Prostitution
Even prostitution has been proposed to bear
excise tax in a bill
in the Canadian
Parliament:
- "5.5 Implementation of a excise tax on prostitution, the brothel is taxed and passed it on" http://clubs.myams.org/qmp/parties/bills/lib-prostitution.pdf.
The reasons given by MPs entering the bill
covered many of the abovementioned areas, including extra funding
for police protection and better healthcare for the prostitutes -
however, so did many of the counterarguments.
Salt, Paper and Windows
Excise (often under different names, especially
before the 15th century, usually constituting of several separate
laws, each referring to the individual item being taxed) has been
known to be applied to substances which would in today's world seem
rather unusual, such as salt,
paper and coffee. In fact,
salt was taxed as early as the second century , and as late as
the twentieth .
Many different reasons have been given for the
taxation of such substances, but have usually - if not explicitly -
revolved around the scarcity and high value of the substance, with
governments clearly feeling entitled to a share of the profits
traders make on these expensive items. Such would the justification
of salt tax, paper excise and even advertisement duty have
been.
Window tax was
slightly different, being brought in as a kind of alternative to
income
tax.
Examples by Country
In the United States
An excise is "a tax upon manufacture, sale or for a business license or charter," according to Law.com's Legal Dictionary, and is to be distinguished from a tax on real property, income or estates." In the United States, the term excise means: (A) any tax other than a property tax or capitation (i.e., an indirect tax, or excise, in the constitutional law sense), or (B) a tax that is simply called an excise in the language of the statute imposing that tax (an excise in the statutory law sense, sometimes called a miscellaneous excise). An excise under definition (A) is not necessarily the same as an excise under definition (B).Example: The Whiskey Tax that resulted in the
Whiskey
Rebellion which started in 1792.
In the United Kingdom
Her Majesty's Customs and Excise (HMCE) was, until April 2005, a department of the British Government in the UK. It was responsible for the collection of Value added tax (VAT), Customs Duties, Excise Duties, and other indirect taxes such as Air Passenger Duty, Climate Change Levy, Insurance Premium Tax, Landfill Tax and Aggregates Levy. It was also responsible for managing the import and export of goods and services into the UK. HMCE was merged with the Inland Revenue (which was responsible for the administration and collection of direct taxes) to form a new department, HM Revenue and Customs, with effect from 18 April 2003.The tax was first implemented in the UK under
this name the mid-17th
century.
In India
In India, an excise tax is levied on the manufacturer of goods when those goods leave the place of manufacture. Formerly called the Central Excise Duty, this tax is now known as the Central Value Added Tax (CENVAT). Manufacturers may offset duty paid on materials used in the manufacturing process by using that duty as a credit against excise tax through a process known as Central Value Added Tax Credit (CENVAT Credit). The offsetting process was formerly known as Modified Value Added Tax (MODVAT).Application of Excise Duty
Excise Stamps
In many countries, excise duty is applied by the
affixation of revenue
stamps to the products being sold. In the case of tobacco or alcohol, for example, the
producer buys a certain bulk
amount of such stamps from the government and is then
obliged to affix one to every packet of cigarettes or bottle of
spirits
produced.
Criticisms
Critics of excise tax - such as Samuel Johnson,
above - have interpreted and described excise duty as simply a
government's way of levying further and unnecessary taxation on the
population. The presence of "refunds of duty" under the UK's list
of excisable activities has been used to support this argument, as
it results in taxation being implemented on persons even where they
would normally be exempt from paying other types of taxes – hence
why they are getting the refund in the first place.
Furthermore, excise is often somewhat similar to
other taxes and sometimes doubles up with them, as in the above
example, or as in the case of customs
duties: since the two taxes largely apply to the same types of
goods, people are forced to pay tax twice over on the same items
(except in the case of duty-free) - once
through excise upon purchase and a second time around through
customs duties upon transportation. (A justification for this is
that the country the items are being entered into is applying the
customs partly for the same reasons as the original excise was
charged, as it is the country of import which will suffer the ill
environmental, health and social effects of, say, the cigarettes
and alcohol being brought in; thus customs has many similar pro's
and con's as has excise.)
Drugs
There are at least two major criticisms of excise
legislation on drugs -
- One is that, while it acts as a deterrent, it is also been argued that the state in question is able to gain revenues, while the legislation protects the anonymity of the dealers - as in the example of Kansas:
-
- "A dealer is not required to give his/her name or address when purchasing stamps and the Department is prohibited from sharing any information relating to the purchase of drug tax stamps with law enforcement or anyone else." http://www.ksrevenue.org/perstaxtypesdrug.htm
- The other criticism is that as far as legal drugs are concerned (ie. medicines and pharmaceuticals) – these are also subject to taxation in some countries, notably India. This has raised controversy about the fact that this tax leads to hugely inflated prices of ordinary and even potentially lifesaving medication.
See also
References
excise in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Акцыз
excise in Bulgarian: Акциз
excise in Czech: Spotřební daň
excise in German: Verbrauchsteuer
(Deutschland)
excise in Spanish: Impuestos especiales
excise in French: Droit d'accise
excise in Lithuanian: Akcizas
excise in Dutch: Accijns
excise in Polish: Akcyza
excise in Swedish: accis
excise in Telugu: ఎక్సైజ్ సుంకం
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
VAT,
abscind, ad valorem
duty, alcohol tax, amputate, amusement tax,
annihilate,
assessment on default, avulse, ax, ban, bar, bisect, bob, butcher, capital gains tax,
capitation,
capitation tax, carve,
chop, cleave, clip, corporation tax, crop, cull, customs, customs duty, cut, cut away, cut in two, cut off,
cut out, death duty, death tax, delete, deracinate, dichotomize, dig out, dig
up, disentangle,
dissever, dock, doomage, draw, draw out, dredge, dredge up, duty, elide, eliminate, enucleate, eradicate, estate duty, estate
tax, evolve, evulse, excavate, except, excess profits tax,
excise tax, exclude,
export tax, expurgate,
exsect, extinguish, extirpate, extract, extricate, federal tax,
fissure, gabelle, gash, get out, gift tax, gouge out,
grub up, hack, halve, head tax, hew, import tax, incise, income tax, inheritance
tax, internal revenue tax, isolate, jigsaw, knock off, lance, land tax, liquor tax, local
tax, lop, luxury tax,
mine, mutilate, nip, nuisance tax, pare, peel, personal property tax, pick
out, pluck out, pluck up, poll, poll tax, property tax,
property-increment tax, protective tariff, provincial tax, prune, pull, pull out, pull up, quarry, rake out, rates, remove, rend, revenue tariff, rip out,
rive, root out, root up,
rule out, sales tax, salt tax, saw, school tax, scissor, set apart, set aside,
sever, severance tax,
shave, shear, slash, slice, slit, snip, specific duty, split, stamp out, state tax,
strike off, strike out, strip, strip off, sunder, take off, take out,
tariff, tariff duty,
tear, tear out, telephone
tax, truncate, unearth, unravel, uproot, use tax, value added tax,
weed out, whittle,
window tax, wipe out, withdraw, wrest out