Land Tax Act 1697 (8 & 9 Will. 3. c. 6)
The '''''' (
8 & 9 Will. 3. c. 6), "'An Act for granting an Aid to His Majesty as well by a Land Tax as by several Subsidies and other Duties payable for One Yeare", the third of the 17th century Land Tax Acts, is the first to say so explicitly in its title. Despite the act levying a
poll tax, income taxes and a variety of other taxes in addition to the land tax, the tax raised just 87% of the 1693 yield. In the Land Tax Act 1696, Land Tax became a
quota tax. That is, after several years of falling yields, the government decided to abandon the attempt to measure assets. Instead, they raised a set sum from England and Wales based on the yield from the Land Tax Act 1692 (
4 Will. & Mar. c. 1). That act imposed a tax at four shillings in the pound and raised about £2 million (about £ million today). The quota acts subsequently raised one of four sums depending on the budgetary requirements of the year: £2 million, £1.5 million, £1 million or £0.5 million using nominal rates of four shillings, three shillings, two shillings and one shilling. The rates were nominal because they were not used to calculate the annual amount. By the end of the eighteenth century, four shillings had become the usual rate. The quota acts divided the total for England and Wales between towns and counties using the 1689 valuations, which were never revised. Land Tax acts thereafter listed each town and county by name together with the amount of quota due. The amounts due from each place only changed in proportion to the fixed sum for the whole country. For example, if the rate was four shillings a place might have to pay £10,000 out of the £2 million total. If the rate was two shillings, the total for the country became £1 million, and the place would have to pay £5,000. Unpaid local worthies were appointed by the acts to run the tax, and they split the total for their area down to parishes and individual properties in proportion to the 1689 valuations. Usually, the commissioners carried the same valuation for each property forward from one year to the next. After the Acts of Union 1707, the annual Land Tax Act also included a fixed sum for Scotland. ==Land Tax Perpetuation Act 1798 (Great Britain)==