Revenue stamp
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A revenue stamp, tax stamp, duty stamp or fiscal stamp is a (usually) adhesive label used to designate collected taxes or fees on documents, tobacco, alcoholic drinks, drugs and medicines, playing cards, hunting licenses, firearm registration, and many other things. Typically, businesses purchase the stamps from the government (thereby paying the tax), and attach them to taxed items as part of putting the items on sale, or in the case of documents, as part of filling out the form.
Revenue stamps often look very similar to postage stamps, and in some countries and time periods it has been possible to use postage stamps for revenue purposes, and vice versa. Some countries also issued dual-purpose postage and revenue stamps.
Description
Revenue stamps are stamps used to designate collected taxes and fees. They are issued by governments, national and local, and by official bodies of various kinds. They take many forms and may be gummed and ungummed, perforated or imperforate, printed or embossed, and of any size. In many countries, they are as detailed in their design as banknotes; they are often made from the same type of paper. The high value of many revenue stamps means that they may contain security devices to prevent counterfeiting.
The
History
In the
The use of revenue stamps goes back further than that of postage stamps (
There are many kinds of revenue stamps in the world, and it is likely that many remain unrecorded. Both national and local entities have issued them. Governments have sometimes combined the functions of
Methods of cancellation
While revenue stamps often resemble
From around 1900, United States revenue stamps were required to be mutilated by cutting, after being affixed to documents, and in addition to being cancelled in ink. A class of office equipment was created to achieve this which became known as "stamp mutilators".[5][6]
Collecting
Revenue stamps were once widely collected by
The lowest point in revenue philately was during the middle years of the twentieth century. A Stanley Gibbons children's stamp album from the 1950s warned in its introduction: "Since Philately is the collecting of stamps that are employed in connection with the Posts, do not put in your album fiscals, telegraph stamps, tobacco-tax labels and other such strange things as are often found in some collections."[7] This is not a definition of philately that would be recognized today.
More recently, revenue philately has become popular again and now has its own FIP (
Many catalogues have been issued by specialist publishers and dealers but revenue stamps still do not feature in some of the most popular catalogues, for instance by Stanley Gibbons and Michel, unless they are revenue and postage stamps. However, both the standard Scott and the Scott Specialised United States catalogue feature US revenue stamps. The leading catalogue for revenue stamps of the United Kingdom, the British Commonwealth and several European countries is the Barefoot Catalogue.
Some types of revenue stamps
Court fees
One of the earliest uses of revenue stamps was to pay Court Fees. Stamps were used in the Indian feudal states as early as 1797, almost 50 years before the first postal stamps.[9]
Although India is only one of several countries that have used tax stamps on legal documents, it was one of the most prolific users. The practice is almost entirely stopped now, partly due to the prevalence of forgeries which cost the issuing government revenue.[10]
Documents
The tax on documents, also commonly known as stamp duty, is one of the oldest uses of revenue stamps, probably being invented in Spain, and introduced (or re-invented) in the Netherlands in the 1620s, then reaching France in 1651 and England in 1694.[11] Governments enforce the payment of the tax by making unstamped documents unenforceable in court. The tax has been applied to contracts, tenancy agreements, wills etc. A pre-printed revenue stamp appeared on many hundis of India.[12]
Tobacco and alcohol
In many countries, tobacco and alcohol are taxed by the use of excise stamps. For instance, the producer may buy stamps from the government which are then affixed to each bottle of alcohol or packet of cigarettes to show that tax has been paid. Often the stamp will be fixed across a seal so that on opening the pack or bottle the stamp is destroyed.[13]
Gallery
This section contains an unencyclopedic or excessive gallery of images. |
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Bahrain 1924 4a revenue stamp
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Canada 1897 $1 electric light inspection stamp from the Lady of the Lightbulbs issue
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Serbian tobacco tax stamps on cigarette packets
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Hong Kong 1867 3c duty stamp
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Ireland 1939 2s passport stamp
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Malta 1899 5s revenue stamp
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Ottoman Empire 1918 20 pa on 1pi revenue stamp for the construction of Hejaz railway
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A $1 revenue stamp issued in 1918, featuringSarawak
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Thrace (under Allied occupation) 1919 30st revenue stamp
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United Kingdom 1920 8d national health insurance stamp overprinted SPECIMEN
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United States of America 1898 ½c documentary stamp from the Battleship issue
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United States of America 1930 2c documentary stamp
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A Danish revenue stamp for spirits
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Old Frizzle, an ace of spades with a Stamp duty in the United Kingdom similar to a banknote,[14] see the article: Richard Harding (forger)
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National Firearms Act, $200 stamp
See also
- Impressed duty stamp
- Postal tax stamp, a postal stamp which also raises fiscal revenue
- Stamped paper
- Revenue stamps of the United States
- Ryan Collection, a collection of Budapest municipal revenue stamps
- Turner Collection of Newspaper Tax Stamps
References
- ^ Home. The Revenue Society, 2011. Retrieved 1 October 2011.
- ISBN 978-0-521-52607-4.
- Revenue Society, Vol.XX, No.3, December 2009, pp.87-89.
- ISBN 0852595638
- ^ "Revenue Stamp Mutilators". Early Office Museum. 2012. Retrieved 15 June 2012. archived from the original
- ^ "United States Patent for a "Stamp Mutilator", 1900. No. 653366" (PDF).
- ^ "Stamp Collecting Hints" in Improved Postage Stamp Album. 28th edn. London: Stanley Gibbons, c. 1953, p. 3.
- ^ FIP REVENUE COMMISSION Fédération Internationale de Philatélie 2011. Retrieved 1 October 2011.
- ^ "South/Southeast Asia Library | UC Berkeley Library". www.lib.berkeley.edu.
- ^ Court fee stamp racket busted, The Hindu, Sept. 10, 2003.
- ISBN 0116414189
- ^ Hundi (Indian bill of exchange), British Museum, 2013. Retrieved 26 November 2013. Archived here.
- H.M. Revenue & Customs, May 2010. Retrieved 1 October 2011. Archived here.
- ^ The International Playing-Card Society – The Ace of Spades
Further reading
- Catalogues by Alfred Forbin.
- Catalogues by Walter Morley.
- The Revenue Society of Great Britain, 2002.
Revenue philatelic societies
- American Revenue Association
- Fiscal Philatelic Society
- The Revenue Society
- The State Revenue Society