Carl Shoup

Carl Shoup
Born Carl Sumner Shoup
October 26, 1902
San Jose, California, US
Died March 23, 2000 (aged 97)
Laconia, New Hampshire, US
Nationality US
Spouse(s) Ruth
Children Donald Shoup, Paul S. Shoup, Beatrice Mayer Shoup
Parent(s) Paul Shoup and Rose Sumner Shoup

Carl Sumner Shoup (October 26, 1902 – March 23, 2000)[1][2][3] was an economist who led the Shoup Mission of seven economists at the invitation of General MacArthur to revise the Tax System in post World War II Japan. Directly contributed to the tax codes of Canada, the United States, Japan, Europe, and South and Central America in the 1930s, 40s, and 50s. Professor Emeritus of Columbia University.

Family

Carl Shoup was the son of railroad executive Paul Shoup and Rose Wilson Shoup. He and his wife Ruth had three children: Donald, Paul S., and Beatrice.

Born in San Jose, and grew up in Los Altos riding his horse to school. Graduate of Stanford Law School in 1924.[1]

Government Economic and Tax Policy

Co-directed, with fellow economist Roy Blough, the creation of the 1937 six-volume study "Report on the Federal Revenue System" of American taxes and potential reforms at the request of Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau, Jr.[1][4]

Carl Sharp was identified as the intellectual father of the value-added tax (VAT)[5] Shoup developed a taxonomy for describing the value alled taxes and linking the administration of the VAT to the capabilities of the particular country.[6]

In the late 40s, he led the Shoup Mission in Japan that led to their current tax system in use today.[4]

Participated in the creation of the Value Added Tax systems in Canada and Europe in the 1950s.[4]

In the 1950s, he contributed to the overhaul of the tax systems in Venezuela, Cuba, and Liberia[4]

Authorship

Honors

References