English

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Etymology

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From post- +‎ tax.

Adjective

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posttax (not comparable)

  1. After tax.
    • 2024, Jeremy B. Rudd, A Practical Guide to Macroeconomics, page 52:
      Without a reasonable theoretical description of consumption – and without the data needed to carefully deal with aggregation biases – all that we are left with to guide the specification of an empirical model is our preexisting intuition that real consumer spending likely depends on real posttax income, and possibly real wealth.