Table of Contents

excess-profits tax

finance
Written and fact-checked by
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Encyclopaedia Britannica's editors oversee subject areas in which they have extensive knowledge, whether from years of experience gained by working on that content or via study for an advanced degree. They write new content and verify and edit content received from contributors.
Table of Contents

excess-profits tax, a tax levied on profits in excess of a stipulated standard of “normal” income. There are two principles governing the determination of excess profits. One, known as the war-profits principle, is designed to recapture wartime increases in income over normal peacetime profits of the taxpayer. The other, identified as the high-profits principle, is based on income in excess of some statutory rate of return on invested capital.

The modern excess-profits tax was first instituted during World War I as a revenue measure and an instrument of curbing excess profits attributable to the war. Excess-profits taxes were levied during World War II and the Korean War (1950–53) in most of the countries whose business earnings were affected by the war. Excess-profits taxes based on the high-profits principle have become part of the peacetime tax structure of a few countries such as Denmark and several South American countries.

The economic effects of an excess-profits tax are usually reckoned in terms of two basic criteria: (1) their efficacy in siphoning off wartime “windfalls” in order to bring about a stabilizing effect on the economy; (2) their effect on economic incentives, production levels, and business expenditure. The integration of an excess-profits tax within the total tax structure of a country, particularly in relation to existing corporation taxes and individual income taxes, and the determination of what is “excess” also pose serious problems.