(Source: Cambridge University Press)
Cambridge
University Press has recently published a new book on the interaction between
tax law and medicine history
ABOUT
In 1783, a stamp
duty was imposed on proprietary or 'quack' medicines. These largely useless but
often dangerous remedies were immensely popular. The tax, which lasted until
1941, was imposed to raise revenue. It failed in its incidental regulatory
purpose, had a negative effect in that the stamp was perceived as a guarantee
of quality, and had a positive effect in encouraging disclosure of the formula.
The book explains the considerable impact the tax had on chemists and druggists
- how it led to an improvement in professional status, but undermined it by
reinforcing their reputations as traders. The legislation imposing the tax was
complex, ambiguous and never reformed. The tax authorities had to administer
it, and executive practice came to dominate it. A minor, specialised, low-yield
tax is shown to be of real significance in the pharmaceutical context, and of
exceptional importance as a model revealing the wider impact of tax law and
administration.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Chantal
Stebbings, University of Exeter
Chantal
Stebbings is Professor of Law and Legal History at the University of Exeter. In
the past she has served as Dean of the Faculty of Law at the University of
Exeter, Visiting Professor at the University of Rennes, France and a Fellow of
the Institute of Taxation. She has also held a British Academy
Research Readership and a Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship. She was generously
supported by the Wellcome Trust for this book, which is her fourth monograph
for Cambridge University Press. She is the Editor of the Journal of Legal
History and the Chair of the Hamlyn Trust.
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
1. Proprietary
medicines and the fiscal state
2. The medicine
stamp duty and the authority of law
3. The tax and
the profession of pharmacy
4. The tax and
the integrity of medicines
5. The demise of
the tax
More information
on the publisher’s
website
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