| Henry Fawcett - Finance - 1880 - 288 pages
...for many years served in India as Finance Minister. He has said that he regarded the income-tax as " about as bad and obnoxious a mode of raising revenue...it is possible to imagine in a country like India .... I think that for an Oriental country, and with the Eastern habit of mind, any tax which imposes... | |
| Shankar Madhav Pagar - Income tax - 1920 - 250 pages
...criticisms urged against the tax are indeed not justified. Thus it was maintained that the income tax is as bad and obnoxious a mode of raising revenue as...is possible to imagine in a country like India. Mr. Liang, one time Finance Minister of the Government of India, said " I think that for an oriental country,... | |
| Shankar Madhav Pagar - Income tax - 1920 - 246 pages
...criticisms Urged against the tax are indeed not justified. Thus it was maintained that the income tax is as bad and obnoxious a mode of raising revenue as...is possible to imagine in a country like India. Mr Liang, one time Finance Minister of the Government of India, said " I think that for an oriental country,... | |
| Nineteenth century - 1879 - 1158 pages
...for many years served in India as Finance Minister. He has said that he regarded the income-tax as ' about as bad and obnoxious a mode of raising revenue...it is possible to imagine in a country like India. . . . I think that for an Oriental country, and with the Eastern habit of mind, any tax which imposes... | |
| English periodicals - 1879 - 1162 pages
...for many years served in India as Finance Minister. He has said that he regarded the income-tax as ' about as bad and obnoxious a mode of raising revenue...it is possible to imagine in a country like India. . . . I think that for an Oriental country, and with the Eastern habit of mind, any tax which imposes... | |
| Great Britain - 1879 - 1156 pages
...for many VĀ«ars served in India as Finance Minister. He has said that he regarded the income-tax as ' about as bad and obnoxious a mode of raising revenue...it is possible to imagine in a country like India. . . . I think that for an Oriental country, and with the Eastern habit of mind, any tax which imposes... | |
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