Revenue Act of 1941
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The Revenue Act of 1941 permanently extended the temporary individual, corporate, and excise tax increases of 1940, increased the
excess profits tax In the United States, an excess profits tax is a tax on any profit above a certain amount. A predominantly wartime fiscal instrument, the tax was designed primarily to capture wartime profits that exceeded normal peacetime profits to prevent perv ...
by 10 percentage points (top rate rose from 50 to 60 percent) and increased corporate tax rates 6-7 percentage points (top rate increased from 24 percent to 31 percent). Some excise taxes were temporarily increased (on alcohol, tires, etc.) and the personal exemption fell from $2,000 to $1,500 (for married couples).


Tax on corporations


Normal tax

A Normal Tax was levied on the
net income In business and accounting, net income (also total comprehensive income, net earnings, net profit, bottom line, sales profit, or credit sales) is an entity's income minus cost of goods sold, expenses, depreciation and amortization, interest, a ...
of corporations as shown in the following table.


Surtax on Corporation

A Surtax was levied on the corporation surtax net income (i.e., net income less allowances and exemptions) of corporations as shown in the following table.


Tax on individuals

A normal tax and a surtax were levied against the net income of individuals as shown in the following table. *Exemption of $750 for single filers and $1,500 for married couples and heads of family. A $400 exemption for each dependent under 18.


References

{{US_tax_acts United States federal taxation legislation 1941 in American law