My understanding of Soviet Union is that private enterprise was not allowed and that everyone essentially 'worked for the government'.
With this in mind, was there still an expectation that people submit yearly tax returns like in western countries?
My understanding of Soviet Union is that private enterprise was not allowed and that everyone essentially 'worked for the government'.
With this in mind, was there still an expectation that people submit yearly tax returns like in western countries?
The answer is no, for the majority of people. Most people in the Soviet Union had only one (legitimate) source of income: their salary. Tax was withheld at source, at a specified rate, and none of these people had to file any tax returns. There was a very small class of people called artisans who officially worked and sold the product of their work themselves, and they had to file a tax return. The rules for, and the number of, these people varied with time, but since the 1920s this was a very small minority. There was no tax on interest income (on bank deposits, bonds, etc.)