Tax and State Revenue in Ottoman Empire: Centralized tax system Iltizam


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Lecture 5

Tax and State Revenue in Ottoman Empire: Centralized tax system Iltizam

Lecture 5

Ottoman Empire (1300-1923)

Ottoman Empire and its development stage

  • The Ottoman Empire stood at the crossroads of intercontinental trade, stretching from the Balkans and the Black Sea region through Anatolia, Syria, Mesopotamia, the gulf of Egypt, and most of the North African coast for six centuries until World War I.
  • The economic institutions and policies of this agrarian empire were shaped to a large degree by the priorities and interests of a central administration.
  • The sixteenth century is generally regarded as the period when the power of the central administration was at its pea. In this period, the fiscal apparatus distinguished between revenue sources allocated to the central treasury for provisioning of the standing army and particularly the elite infantry (janissaries), on the one hand, and the sources allocated to prebendal timar system for the upkeep of provincial cavalry, on the other.
  • In the 17th and 18th centuries, the growing demands of warfare and particularly the need to provision an increasing number of infantry units induced the administration to adopt a series of ad hoc fiscal innovations to increase the cash revenues of the central treasury. This period is characterized as politically decentralized because of the rise of urban notables in the provinces that served as tax intermediaries and also formed their own armed retinues.
  • Central revenues remained low during the 17th and 18th centuries because large part of the tax receipts were retained by various intermediaries, most of them urban elites in the provinces.
  • Rise of central armies and the centralization of finances were closely connected because centrally administrated troops consumed the bulk of the tax revenues
  • Central treasury and provincial budgets.
  • Timar – land grant given by the Ottoman sultans between 14th and 16th centuries from the conquered territory with annual tax revenue
  • The revenue sources allocated to the prebendal timar system were primarily rural and agricultural dues. Since Ottoman lands and population were considered the sultan's patrimony, the peasants owed land rent, taxes, labor dues, and other fees designated in kind and in cash. Provincial functionaries of the state, sipahis, collected these dues and spent to equip and prepare a designated number of cavalrymen for military campaigns and other administrative tasks.
  • Mukataa or tax farming system was employed for the collection of monetary taxes in the urban areas including custom dues and commercial taxes, income from mints, saltworks and mines.
  • Avariz – were extraordinary war taxes on household collected in kind and increasingly in cash by apportioning the demands of the state amongst taxpayers at the local level. It levied irregularly in times of war and collected in kind and it became increasingly more regular during the 17th century.

Military expenses

  • Since a large part fo the tax revenues were spent for military purposes, Ottoman state finances came under heavy pressure during the period of war. Ottoman administration modified their discal institutions and adapted entirely new institutions for tax collection, domestic borrowing or new revenue.
  • Ottoman cavalry began to lose their effectiveness in the second half of the sixteenth century in the wars against the Habsburgs, who brought large numbers of infantry with firearms to the battlefields. It resulted higher pressure for larger armies and increasing demand for revenues at the center.
  • Timar system soon began to be abandoned in favor of tax farming arrangements with individuals possessing liquid capital who could make cash payments to the central administration in return fo the right to collect taxes of a given region for one year
  • Further deterioration of state finance increased the duration of tax farming contracts to three years
  • provincial notables (Ayan) class formed during this period who had local knowledge. They lived in urban centers, accumulated large supplies of cash, engaged in trade and tax farming

Ottoman retreat and decentralization

  • Following unsuccessful siege of Vienna in 1683, the Ottomans lost a good deal of territory and retreated in war against an alliance of Habsburgs, Poles and Russians.
  • It led to major fiscal reforms, new taxes and revenue increase
  • New institution was malikane system which revenue source began to be farmed out on a lifetime basis in return for a large initial payment to be followed by specified flows of annual payments.
  • Rationale offered for this system was that by extending terms of contracts state hoped tax farmers might take better care of the tax sources
    • Up to 10.000 individuals based in the provinces as malikane holders
    • Many elites in the provinces were able to acquire and pass from one generation to the next

Esham

  • During the 18th century, malikane system did not fulfill the expectations of the central administration, state could not regain control of its revenue sources after the death of the malikane holders
  • State developed new long-term domestic borrowing called esham. In this system, the annual net revenue from tax sources were specified in nominal terms. This amount divided into a large number of shares which were sold to the public for the lifetime of the buyers. The annual revenues of the source continued to be collected by the tax farmers.

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