2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.ihe.2016.02.002
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A tale of two taxes: The diverging fates of the federal property and income tax decrees in post-revolutionary Mexico

Abstract: The Mexican tax system in the 1800s was almost entirely composed of indirect taxes. However, the Revolution opened a window for change. In the early 1920s, President Alvaro Obregón created two direct taxes by decree: the federal property tax and the income tax. It was a clear disruption of the status quo, naturally raising opposition from those affected by the new taxes. Yet the attempt to establish the federal property tax failed, while the income tax was a relative success. This paper explains the divergent … Show more

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