Monday, Jun. 29, 1953
A Measure of Privacy
Since 1923, a Wisconsin law has permitted anyone to inspect any citizen's state tax return, including his income from investments, his contributions to charity, his deductions for support and medical services, etc. In Madison last week, Governor Walter Kohler signed a bill restoring some measure of privacy to state taxpayers. Hereafter, anyone willing to ante up a $1 fee may learn the total tax paid by any individual or corporation, but the taxpayer's actual return, and consequently his specific income and deductions, will no longer be open to inspection.*
* The appetite for minding other people's business is even stronger in Sweden, where personal income taxes are made public and where a private company publishes a widely read annual register giving the incomes of all families with more than $3,000 a year.
This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.