compensated income change - meaning and definition. What is compensated income change
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

What (who) is compensated income change - definition

FORM OF ABOLISHING SLAVERY IN WHICH FORMER SLAVEOWNERS WERE PAID
Compensated Emancipation

Income tax         
  • General government]] revenue, in % of GDP, from personal income taxes. For this data, the [[variance]] of GDP per capita with purchasing power parity (PPP) is explained in 27 % by tax revenue
  • Citizenship-based}}
  • Payroll]] and income tax by OECD Country in 2013
  • upright
  • marginal statutory corporate income tax rate,  marginal statutory personal income tax rate in OECD
  • Top marginal tax rate of the income tax (i.e. the maximum rate of taxation applied to the highest part of income)
TAX IMPOSED ON INDIVIDUALS OR ENTITIES (TAXPAYERS) THAT VARIES WITH RESPECTIVE INCOME OR PROFITS (TAXABLE INCOME)
Income Tax; Income taxes; Personal income tax; Personal Income Tax; Personal income taxes; IRPEF; Income taxation; Income Taxes; Individual income tax; Criticisms of income taxation; Personal profit tax; Personal tax; History of income taxes
An income tax is a tax imposed on individuals or entities (taxpayers) in respect of the income or profits earned by them (commonly called taxable income). Income tax generally is computed as the product of a tax rate times the taxable income.
income tax         
  • General government]] revenue, in % of GDP, from personal income taxes. For this data, the [[variance]] of GDP per capita with purchasing power parity (PPP) is explained in 27 % by tax revenue
  • Citizenship-based}}
  • Payroll]] and income tax by OECD Country in 2013
  • upright
  • marginal statutory corporate income tax rate,  marginal statutory personal income tax rate in OECD
  • Top marginal tax rate of the income tax (i.e. the maximum rate of taxation applied to the highest part of income)
TAX IMPOSED ON INDIVIDUALS OR ENTITIES (TAXPAYERS) THAT VARIES WITH RESPECTIVE INCOME OR PROFITS (TAXABLE INCOME)
Income Tax; Income taxes; Personal income tax; Personal Income Tax; Personal income taxes; IRPEF; Income taxation; Income Taxes; Individual income tax; Criticisms of income taxation; Personal profit tax; Personal tax; History of income taxes
¦ noun tax levied directly on personal income.
income tax         
  • General government]] revenue, in % of GDP, from personal income taxes. For this data, the [[variance]] of GDP per capita with purchasing power parity (PPP) is explained in 27 % by tax revenue
  • Citizenship-based}}
  • Payroll]] and income tax by OECD Country in 2013
  • upright
  • marginal statutory corporate income tax rate,  marginal statutory personal income tax rate in OECD
  • Top marginal tax rate of the income tax (i.e. the maximum rate of taxation applied to the highest part of income)
TAX IMPOSED ON INDIVIDUALS OR ENTITIES (TAXPAYERS) THAT VARIES WITH RESPECTIVE INCOME OR PROFITS (TAXABLE INCOME)
Income Tax; Income taxes; Personal income tax; Personal Income Tax; Personal income taxes; IRPEF; Income taxation; Income Taxes; Individual income tax; Criticisms of income taxation; Personal profit tax; Personal tax; History of income taxes
n. a tax on an individual's net income, after deductions for various expenses and payments such as charitable gifts, calculated on a formula which takes into consideration whether it is paid jointly by a married couple, the number of dependents of the taxpayers, special breaks for ages over 65, disabilities and other factors. Federal income taxes have been collected since 1913 when they were authorized by the 16th Amendment to the Constitution. Most states also assess income taxes, but at a substantially lower rate than that of the federal government. See also: income tax

Wikipedia

Compensated emancipation

Compensated emancipation was a method of ending slavery, under which the enslaved person's owner received compensation from the government in exchange for manumitting the slave. This could be monetary, and it could allow the owner to retain the slave for a period of labor, an indenture. Cash compensation rarely was equal to the slave's market value.

An indenture was seen as a compromise between slavery and outright emancipation, an intermediate step. However, no one was happy with compensated emancipation. Owners complained that their compensation was small compared with their loss; they were paid less, often much less, than what the slaveowner could have sold the enslaved person for (the market value). Governments and non-slaveholding citizens complained about the financial burden of compensating the owners, while for the formerly enslaved it seemed ludicrous that those who had all along benefited from slavery should now receive additional compensation, while its victims received no compensation whatsoever. Historian Eric Foner wrote, "Even Haiti, where slavery died amid a violent revolution, agreed in 1824 to pay a large indemnity to former slaveholders in exchange for French recognition of its independence.... No one proposed to compensate slaves for their years of unrequited toil." Compensation of slaveholders has been viewed as akin to compensating a thief for returning stolen property, or paying ransom to a kidnapper for releasing his victim, and therefore not so much compensation as a reward for committing what should be a crime.

To be sure, the indenture system represented for the formerly enslaved an improvement over slavery itself; those indentured could not be forcibly relocated, children and other family members could not be taken away by force, and they could no longer be whipped or raped. However, they were still not free.