A Law of "Unintended" Consequences? United States Federal Taxation and the Market for Modern Art in the United States

This article aims to explore a to-date little considered nexus between U.S. Federal taxation and the American art market. Lacking so far in an increasing body of studies of the relationship between tax policy and the arts is a discussion of impacts which Federal taxation might have had upon the Amer...

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Main Author: Deirdre Robson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Forum Kunst und Markt 2019-05-01
Series:Journal for Art Market Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/article/view/69
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spelling doaj-e354551a1eee4a6ca71c509f20c204812020-11-25T01:34:22ZengForum Kunst und MarktJournal for Art Market Studies2511-76022019-05-013110.23690/jams.v3i1.6963A Law of "Unintended" Consequences? United States Federal Taxation and the Market for Modern Art in the United StatesDeirdre Robson0University of West LondonThis article aims to explore a to-date little considered nexus between U.S. Federal taxation and the American art market. Lacking so far in an increasing body of studies of the relationship between tax policy and the arts is a discussion of impacts which Federal taxation might have had upon the American art market for modern art rather than arts sector more generally. The scope of this article is two-fold: first, to posit a nexus between Federal revenue codes and the systemic structure of the nascent New York market in the mid-twentieth century; second, to explore how the radical tax reforms of the 1980s impacted on the New York art market and collector preferences. In relation to this, this article will explore two cornerstones underpinning Federal taxation: first, the tax-exempt status given to non-profit institutions; second, the charitable deduction allowed against Federal tax (personal income tax, estate tax) liabilities as part of the American ethos of indirect giving.https://fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/article/view/69taxation, United States, Federal government, Revenue Code, income tax, estate tax, charitable deduction, tax reform, AMT, art market, museum
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Deirdre Robson
spellingShingle Deirdre Robson
A Law of "Unintended" Consequences? United States Federal Taxation and the Market for Modern Art in the United States
Journal for Art Market Studies
taxation, United States, Federal government, Revenue Code, income tax, estate tax, charitable deduction, tax reform, AMT, art market, museum
author_facet Deirdre Robson
author_sort Deirdre Robson
title A Law of "Unintended" Consequences? United States Federal Taxation and the Market for Modern Art in the United States
title_short A Law of "Unintended" Consequences? United States Federal Taxation and the Market for Modern Art in the United States
title_full A Law of "Unintended" Consequences? United States Federal Taxation and the Market for Modern Art in the United States
title_fullStr A Law of "Unintended" Consequences? United States Federal Taxation and the Market for Modern Art in the United States
title_full_unstemmed A Law of "Unintended" Consequences? United States Federal Taxation and the Market for Modern Art in the United States
title_sort law of "unintended" consequences? united states federal taxation and the market for modern art in the united states
publisher Forum Kunst und Markt
series Journal for Art Market Studies
issn 2511-7602
publishDate 2019-05-01
description This article aims to explore a to-date little considered nexus between U.S. Federal taxation and the American art market. Lacking so far in an increasing body of studies of the relationship between tax policy and the arts is a discussion of impacts which Federal taxation might have had upon the American art market for modern art rather than arts sector more generally. The scope of this article is two-fold: first, to posit a nexus between Federal revenue codes and the systemic structure of the nascent New York market in the mid-twentieth century; second, to explore how the radical tax reforms of the 1980s impacted on the New York art market and collector preferences. In relation to this, this article will explore two cornerstones underpinning Federal taxation: first, the tax-exempt status given to non-profit institutions; second, the charitable deduction allowed against Federal tax (personal income tax, estate tax) liabilities as part of the American ethos of indirect giving.
topic taxation, United States, Federal government, Revenue Code, income tax, estate tax, charitable deduction, tax reform, AMT, art market, museum
url https://fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/article/view/69
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