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| Washington
Post, Outlook |
April
11, 2004 |
For
Singles, April Really Is the Cruelest Month
By John 0.
Fox
They're the buzzwords in Washington these days: "marriage"
and "family values." Of course, we're having a little disagreement
over how to define them, what with President Bush's marriage initiative
and the proposal for a constitutional amendment to define the institution
pitted against the fight for same-sex marriages. Still, underlying these
divisions is the belief among all groups that family matters. And so
Congress strives, in the tax laws, to promote family values.
Lost in the conversation, meanwhile, is any mention of "singles
values." But the choice to be single, whether temporary or permanent,
should be accorded the same dignity as the choice to marry, shouldn't
it? Including under our tax laws. You'd think that Congress, above all,
would be sensitive to the interests of singles, because there are so
many of them -- every year, there are more single income tax returns
filed than joint ones (58 million vs. 51 million in 2001). But if you
viewed single people solely by the way Congress chooses to tax most
of them, you might think they were, well, almost un-American. The way
they're treated isn't fair, and it should change.
You've all heard about the tax system's so-called marriage penalty,
which discourages a couple with good incomes from marrying because their
combined income taxes would be greater than if they remained single.
Congress heard so much about it that, through legislation in 2001 and
2003, it addressed that problem for most couples by increasing their
standard deduction and broadening their tax brackets. But a great injustice
remains in our tax system: the "singles penalty." The annual
income tax deadline arrives this week, and there's no getting around
it -- most of us who are married and also have young kids are going
to fare a lot better than most of those who haven't tied the knot or
had any children.
Don't know anything about this? Well, you should, especially if you
are among those single taxpayers who don't itemize their deductions.
That's roughly 80 percent of all singles -- a total of about 48 million
individuals, if you're counting. While the singles penalty is harshest
on lower- and moderate-income earners, it affects all 48 million. Here's
why.
Consider first our nation's official poverty thresholds. The threshold
for single people last year was about $9,600; but single people who
claim a standard deduction on their 2003 returns are expected to begin
to pay a tax if their income exceeds a mere $9,300 -- that is, before
what they earn has, by the government's own definition, lifted them
out of poverty. (The $9,300 tax threshold results from the sum of the
personal exemption plus the standard deduction, and the benefit of a
small earned income credit.)
So many singles, with modest incomes and modest expenses, depend on
the standard deduction -- a measly $4,750 in 2003 -- because it is larger
than the sum of what they might itemize. (By contrast, more than half
of all joint returns claim itemized deductions.) These singles include
many young people and many seniors, but also nearly all people who earn
not a whole lot more than the minimum wage and may work two or even
three jobs. Many are renters, but Congress prohibits them from deducting
any of their rent, even though it often consumes a disproportionate
share of their income.
By contrast, Congress views the $19,000 poverty threshold for a working
married couple with two young children and typical child care costs
as woefully inadequate for purposes of setting their tax threshold.
Congress believes that this couple should not begin to pay a penny of
income taxes until its income exceeds $47,700, or about 21/2 times its
poverty threshold. (To calculate their tax, subtract $12,200 for four
personal exemptions and $9,500 for their standard deduction, which leaves
$26,000 of taxable income. Taxes tentatively owed: $3,200. Then subtract
their tax credits: $2,000 in child credits ($1,000 for each child) and
$1,200 in child care credits ($600 for each child), for a total of $3,200.
Taxes finally owed: zero.)
That certainly seems reasonable, so single people shouldn't object.
But they have every right to ask Congress: Where's your compassion for
us?
To understand the harshness of the tax threshold imposed on most singles,
let's consider one who earns $9,600 and see what it's like for her to
try to live on that amount. Well, it isn't really $9,600, because 7.65
percent is withheld for Social Security and Medicare taxes, and, thanks
to Congress, she has to pay a small income tax. That leaves $8,835,
or about $740 a month.
Our taxpayer -- let's call her Meg -- lives by herself in an efficiency
apartment, doesn't own a car and takes the bus to work and on personal
trips. In a typical American city such as Baltimore or Cleveland, she
might get that apartment for $350 to $600 a month. Say her rent is $440,
which leaves her with $300 to pay for everything else -- food, clothing,
furniture, household and personal supplies, telephone, utilities, laundry,
sales taxes, public transportation, and much more. (Heaven forbid she
should actually buy a magazine or go to a movie.) Health insurance alone
-- she doesn't qualify for Medicaid because she doesn't have a dependent
child -- would consume much of the $300, so she goes without it and
crosses her fingers. It isn't really a choice anyway: Meg runs out of
money before she finishes paying her other bills.
Now consider Fran and Bill, a hypothetical married couple with two
preschool children. Both work full-time and earn a combined income of
$47,700. We'll assume they pay $7,000 for child care ($30 a day, five
days a week), and $3,650 in Social Security and Medicare taxes. This
leaves about$37,000 (still nearly twice the poverty threshold), or about
$3,100 a month, to pay all other expenses. We don't have to elaborate
on the details to reach an obvious conclusion: It's a lot easier, given
economies of scale, for Fran and Bill to meet their family's basic living
expenses on $3,100 a month than it is for Meg to cover her basic living
expenses on $740 a month.
Moreover, at their income level, Fran and Bill are more likely than
Meg to receive benefits at work, such as paid health insurance premiums
or contributions to a retirement plan, none of which count as income
on their tax return. This means that their actual income may be greater
than $47,700, yet they still don't owe any income tax. Meg probably
has only her $9,600 because jobs at her salary level usually offer no
benefits.
If the scandal here were limited to Meg's income tax of $30 on the
difference between her $9,300 tax threshold and the $9,600 poverty threshold,
our outrage would be limited. But if Congress is going to recognize,
as it should, that a family of four needs income far in excess of its
poverty threshold before it can afford to pay an income tax, simple
tax justice requires that the same principle be extended to a single
person. We may debate the income level at which the change should be
made, but I believe the starting point of the discussion should be no
less than $1,200 to $1,500 a month ($14,400 to $18,000 a year), from
which the federal government will subtract 7.65 percent for Social Security
and Medicare taxes. With these new thresholds, we're talking about roughly
8 million to 11 million additional single people who would be protected
from being taxed; and in their cases, the tax savings would range from
a few hundred dollars to more than $1,000 a year -- amounts vitally
important to them.
But I would go further. The injustice is not limited to singles who
should be spared paying any tax. The initial tax threshold for all singles,
including those with higher incomes, should be set so that not one of
them pays a tax until their income exceeds a level we regard as necessary
to meet basic living expenses. This is what Congress does for that family
of four; this is what voters should insist it do for the household of
one. Until that time, the great majority of singles in this country
can legitimately argue that, at least for tax purposes, they are treated
like second-class citizens.
Singles know this is a big election year. They also should know that,
in the past, they have had a poor voting record, which no doubt goes
far toward explaining their treatment under the tax laws. If singles
were to let their candidates for Congress and the White House know that
they are going to vote in droves this year, and that they expect to
vote for candidates who promise to fix these tax injustices, I'm betting
plenty of those candidates would listen up.
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