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Marriage penalty

The marriage penalty in the United States refers to the higher taxes required from some married couples with both partners earning income that would not be required by two otherwise identical single people with exactly the same incomes. There is also a marriage bonus that applies in other cases. Multiple factors are involved, but in general, in the current U.S. system, single-income married couples usually benefit from filing as a married couple (similar to so-called income splitting), while dual-income married couples are often penalized. The percentage of couples affected has varied over the years, depending on shifts in tax rates.

Progressive taxation rates combined with income splitting edit

NOTE: New US tax code passed into law in 2017 codified new marginal tax rates and brackets for those filing as single or as married filing jointly, among many other changes. Those new tax brackets substantially eliminated much of the "marriage penalty" discussed below. There is still some penalty that exists in certain situations (e.g. deductions for state and local taxes (SALT) are not doubled for those who are married filing jointly, there remains a 2% penalty on combined between $600,000 and $1,000,000, if there are multiple dependent children, etc.). There can also be a small penalty or benefit based upon whether the two individuals have a substantially similar or largely different income. Marriage bonuses can be as high as 21 percent of a couple’s income, and marriage penalties can be as high as 12 percent of a couple’s income. This entire article needs to be updated for the changes implemented with the new tax code because the following example, based upon 2013 US federal tax rates, is no longer accurate.[1]

The US tax code fixes different income levels for passing from one marginal tax rate to another, depending on whether the filing is done as a single person or as a married couple. For lower incomes, the transition points for married couples are twice those for single persons, which benefits a couple that gets married if their incomes are sufficiently different. This is equivalent to "income splitting", meaning that the tax due is the same as if the two persons use the schedule for single persons, but with each declaring half the total income. At higher incomes, this equivalence is lost but there is still an advantage if the two incomes are sufficiently different.

If the incomes of the two persons are similar, then at the lower end of the tax schedule there is no difference between filing as singles and filing as a married couple (ignoring the question of deductions, see below). But at the higher end of the tax schedule, there is a penalty for a married couple whose incomes are similar, compared to what they would pay as singles.

For example, the following chart shows the US federal tax rates for 2013:

Marginal tax rate[2][3][4] Single Married filing jointly or qualified widow(er) Married filing separately Head of household
10% $0 – $8,925 $0 – $17,850 $0 – $8,925 $0 – $12,750
15% $8,926 – $36,250 $17,851 – $72,500 $8,926 – $36,250 $12,751 – $48,600
25% $36,251 – $87,850 $72,501 – $146,400 $36,251 – $73,200 $48,601 – $125,450
28% $87,851 – $183,250 $146,401 – $223,050 $73,201 – $111,525 $125,451 – $203,150
33% $183,251 – $398,350 $223,051 – $398,350 $111,526 – $199,175 $203,151 – $398,350
35% $398,351 – $400,000 $398,351 – $450,000 $199,176 – $225,000 $398,351 – $425,000
39.6% $400,001+ $450,001+ $225,001+ $425,001+

Under these tax rates, two single people who each earned $87,850 would each file as "Single" and each would pay a marginal tax rate of 25%. However, if those same two people were married, their combined income would be exactly the same as before (2 * $87,850 = $175,700), but the "Married filing Jointly" tax brackets would push them into a higher marginal rate of 28%, costing them an additional $879 in taxes.

In the most extreme case, two single people who each earned $400,000 would each pay a marginal tax rate of 35%; but if those same two people filed as "Married, filing jointly" then their combined income would be exactly the same (2 * $400,000 = $800,000), yet $350,000 of that income would be taxed as the higher 39.6% rate, resulting in a marriage penalty of $32,119 in extra taxes ($16,100 for the 39.6% bracket alone, plus the remainder is due to the higher phase out of the lower brackets.) Using the formulas for 2016 income, if both persons have a taxable income X greater than $415,050 then as singles each would pay 0.396X−$43830.05, whereas if they were married filing jointly they would pay 2(0.396X)−$54333.70, so they lose 2($43830.05)−$54333.70 or $33,326.40.[5]

In some couples, the greater earner may benefit from filing as married, while the lesser earner from not being married. For example, consider two single people, one with an income of $100,000 (and therefore paying a marginal rate of 28%) and the other with no income (and therefore paying no income tax). By being married and filing jointly, the $100,000 earner reduces his/her bracket to the 25% rate, receiving a "marriage bonus" for a net tax savings of $364, while the nonearner goes from the 10% bracket to the 25% bracket on the first dollars earned upon entering the workforce.

It can be shown[6][7] that it is mathematically impossible for a tax system to have all of (a) marginal tax rates that increase with income, (b) joint filing with (full) income splitting for married couples, and (c) combined tax bills that are (entirely) unaffected by two people's marital status. Partial income splitting models allow only a part of the income to be transferred among spouses in order to balance such criteria.

Deductions edit

The US tax code allows taxpayers to claim deductions (such as charitable contributions, mortgage interest, or payments for state taxes) on their income. Taxpayers can choose either an automatic standard deduction or else can choose to itemize their deductions. Two single people filing separate returns can each choose the deduction policy that benefits them more, but a married couple filing a single return will both be forced to use the same method (Title 26 U.S. Code §63(c)(6)(A)). For example, if one person has no significant deductions, the person can take the standard deduction ($12,400 as of 2020). A different person, who has, for example, $15,000 in itemizations (such as charitable contributions), they would be better off itemizing deductions since the standard deduction is much less.

If the two people were allowed to file separate tax returns, then each can claim the deduction policy that benefits them the most, and their total combined deduction would be $27,400 ($12,400 + $15,000). However, if the two people are combined on one "Married, filing jointly" tax return, then they would be forced to choose either itemizing their deductions ($15,000 combined) or else using the standard deduction ($12,400 per person, $24,800 combined). Either way, the married couple would receive less deductions than two otherwise identical single people with exactly the same income.

On the other hand, being married can result in less tax. If one person earns twice the sum of the standard deduction ($24,800 a year) and the other earns nothing, the wage earner would pay 10% (tax year 2020) of his total income as tax as a single, but as a couple their taxable income would be zero so they would pay no tax.

Social security/Medicare burden and subsidy to sole breadwinners and nonearning parents edit

In connection with other taxation issues in the United States, one concern is that these marriages are subsidizing one-earner/one-nonearner parent couples in Social Security and Medicare benefits.[8] For example, in social security and Medicare, two-earner couples pay taxes that create a surplus or at least pay for their own benefits (and receive reduced benefits such as reduced survivor benefits), while one-earner couples pay insufficient taxes that create a deficit and receive an extra, unfunded benefit of 50% or more in Social Security (i.e., a total of 150% or more), and 100% or more in Medicare (i.e. a total of 200% or more).

This problem is exacerbated by the fact Social Security and Medicare taxes are collected only on wage income, passive income such as capital and property earnings are exempt, and benefits are progressive. This means that the chief tax burden for the programs is carried by two-earner families with wages that range between the mid-range and the cap and these families also receive fewer benefits than any other family structure or set-up.

Impact of current social security reform proposals and recent Medicare tax reform in the United States edit

Proposals to "raise the cap" will continue to place an extra burden on 2-earner families where each partner has earned income (not capital gains or other property-based income that is exempt from the tax).

The Affordable Care Act added a tax on passive income and capital gains to support Medicare [citation needed] but it is not known if this is sufficient to prevent the heavy burden faced by two-earner families in subsidizing sole breadwinner families and especially the burden faced by two-earner families with wages between the mid-range and the cap. No such tax is yet imposed to support progressivity in Social Security benefits.

Relationship to reduction of government debt edit

The Tax Policy Center also sees the current "marriage bonus" for sole breadwinners as the chief tax expenditure of the Bush tax cuts and a key contributor to the Federal debt.[9]

The International Monetary Fund has called for the United States, Portugal and France, all countries with significant sovereign debt, to eliminate their practices, including income splitting, that charge 2-earner families higher taxes over single income families (whether married or not).[10]

Non-US residents edit

The marriage penalty can be even worse in cases where one spouse is not a citizen or resident of the United States [citation needed]. Although that spouse cannot be required by US law to pay US taxes, since the US person is still required by law to file taxes on worldwide income, two choices are left. The US person may either file as 'Married Filing Separately' (or 'Head of Household' if they have at least one qualifying person who is not their spouse) or try to convince their spouse to voluntarily pay US income taxes on their income by filing a joint return. The former requires using the 'Married Filing Separately' or 'Head of Household' tax brackets, which are less beneficial than 'Married Filing Jointly'.[11][2][3] The latter allows that person to use the more favorable 'Married Filing Jointly' tax brackets but requires paying tax on the non-US person's income, which would not be required for two otherwise identical single people.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ https://files.taxfoundation.org/20180216105630/Tax-Foundation-FF573.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  2. ^ a b https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/n1036.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  3. ^ a b Kasprak, Nick (January 3, 2013). "2013 Tax Brackets".
  4. ^ Revenue Procedure 2013-15, sec. 2.01, Internal Revenue Service, U.S. Dep't of the Treasury (Jan. 2013).
  5. ^ TAX TABLE, p. 14.
  6. ^ Rosen, Harvey. 1977. "Is it time to abandon joint filing?", National Tax Journal 30 (December), 423-428.
  7. ^ Lovell, Michael. 1982. "On taxing marriages", National Tax Journal 35 (December), 507-510.
  8. ^ Howard M. Iams; Gayle L. Reznik; Christopher R. Tamborini (2009). "Earnings Sharing in Social Security: Projected Impacts of Alternative Proposals Using the MINT Model". Social Security Bulletin Vol. 69 No.1. U.S. Social Security Administration Office of Retirement and Disability Policy. Retrieved 3 April 2012.
  9. ^ "Taxation and the Family: What are marriage penalties and bonuses?". The Tax Policy Center. Retrieved 19 October 2013.
  10. ^ Yukhananov, Anna (September 23, 2013). "IMF warns of slow progress achieving gender equality". Reuters. Retrieved 26 November 2013.
  11. ^ [1] See sub-heading 'Non-resident Alien Spouse' under the 'Considered Unmarried' heading on page 22 (3rd column).

External links edit

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The marriage penalty in the United States refers to the higher taxes required from some married couples with both partners earning income that would not be required by two otherwise identical single people with exactly the same incomes There is also a marriage bonus that applies in other cases Multiple factors are involved but in general in the current U S system single income married couples usually benefit from filing as a married couple similar to so called income splitting while dual income married couples are often penalized The percentage of couples affected has varied over the years depending on shifts in tax rates Contents 1 Progressive taxation rates combined with income splitting 2 Deductions 3 Social security Medicare burden and subsidy to sole breadwinners and nonearning parents 3 1 Impact of current social security reform proposals and recent Medicare tax reform in the United States 4 Relationship to reduction of government debt 5 Non US residents 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksProgressive taxation rates combined with income splitting editNOTE New US tax code passed into law in 2017 codified new marginal tax rates and brackets for those filing as single or as married filing jointly among many other changes Those new tax brackets substantially eliminated much of the marriage penalty discussed below There is still some penalty that exists in certain situations e g deductions for state and local taxes SALT are not doubled for those who are married filing jointly there remains a 2 penalty on combined between 600 000 and 1 000 000 if there are multiple dependent children etc There can also be a small penalty or benefit based upon whether the two individuals have a substantially similar or largely different income Marriage bonuses can be as high as 21 percent of a couple s income and marriage penalties can be as high as 12 percent of a couple s income This entire article needs to be updated for the changes implemented with the new tax code because the following example based upon 2013 US federal tax rates is no longer accurate 1 The US tax code fixes different income levels for passing from one marginal tax rate to another depending on whether the filing is done as a single person or as a married couple For lower incomes the transition points for married couples are twice those for single persons which benefits a couple that gets married if their incomes are sufficiently different This is equivalent to income splitting meaning that the tax due is the same as if the two persons use the schedule for single persons but with each declaring half the total income At higher incomes this equivalence is lost but there is still an advantage if the two incomes are sufficiently different If the incomes of the two persons are similar then at the lower end of the tax schedule there is no difference between filing as singles and filing as a married couple ignoring the question of deductions see below But at the higher end of the tax schedule there is a penalty for a married couple whose incomes are similar compared to what they would pay as singles For example the following chart shows the US federal tax rates for 2013 Marginal tax rate 2 3 4 Single Married filing jointly or qualified widow er Married filing separately Head of household10 0 8 925 0 17 850 0 8 925 0 12 75015 8 926 36 250 17 851 72 500 8 926 36 250 12 751 48 60025 36 251 87 850 72 501 146 400 36 251 73 200 48 601 125 45028 87 851 183 250 146 401 223 050 73 201 111 525 125 451 203 15033 183 251 398 350 223 051 398 350 111 526 199 175 203 151 398 35035 398 351 400 000 398 351 450 000 199 176 225 000 398 351 425 00039 6 400 001 450 001 225 001 425 001 Under these tax rates two single people who each earned 87 850 would each file as Single and each would pay a marginal tax rate of 25 However if those same two people were married their combined income would be exactly the same as before 2 87 850 175 700 but the Married filing Jointly tax brackets would push them into a higher marginal rate of 28 costing them an additional 879 in taxes In the most extreme case two single people who each earned 400 000 would each pay a marginal tax rate of 35 but if those same two people filed as Married filing jointly then their combined income would be exactly the same 2 400 000 800 000 yet 350 000 of that income would be taxed as the higher 39 6 rate resulting in a marriage penalty of 32 119 in extra taxes 16 100 for the 39 6 bracket alone plus the remainder is due to the higher phase out of the lower brackets Using the formulas for 2016 income if both persons have a taxable income X greater than 415 050 then as singles each would pay 0 396X 43830 05 whereas if they were married filing jointly they would pay 2 0 396X 54333 70 so they lose 2 43830 05 54333 70 or 33 326 40 5 In some couples the greater earner may benefit from filing as married while the lesser earner from not being married For example consider two single people one with an income of 100 000 and therefore paying a marginal rate of 28 and the other with no income and therefore paying no income tax By being married and filing jointly the 100 000 earner reduces his her bracket to the 25 rate receiving a marriage bonus for a net tax savings of 364 while the nonearner goes from the 10 bracket to the 25 bracket on the first dollars earned upon entering the workforce It can be shown 6 7 that it is mathematically impossible for a tax system to have all of a marginal tax rates that increase with income b joint filing with full income splitting for married couples and c combined tax bills that are entirely unaffected by two people s marital status Partial income splitting models allow only a part of the income to be transferred among spouses in order to balance such criteria Deductions editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The US tax code allows taxpayers to claim deductions such as charitable contributions mortgage interest or payments for state taxes on their income Taxpayers can choose either an automatic standard deduction or else can choose to itemize their deductions Two single people filing separate returns can each choose the deduction policy that benefits them more but a married couple filing a single return will both be forced to use the same method Title 26 U S Code 63 c 6 A For example if one person has no significant deductions the person can take the standard deduction 12 400 as of 2020 A different person who has for example 15 000 in itemizations such as charitable contributions they would be better off itemizing deductions since the standard deduction is much less If the two people were allowed to file separate tax returns then each can claim the deduction policy that benefits them the most and their total combined deduction would be 27 400 12 400 15 000 However if the two people are combined on one Married filing jointly tax return then they would be forced to choose either itemizing their deductions 15 000 combined or else using the standard deduction 12 400 per person 24 800 combined Either way the married couple would receive less deductions than two otherwise identical single people with exactly the same income On the other hand being married can result in less tax If one person earns twice the sum of the standard deduction 24 800 a year and the other earns nothing the wage earner would pay 10 tax year 2020 of his total income as tax as a single but as a couple their taxable income would be zero so they would pay no tax Social security Medicare burden and subsidy to sole breadwinners and nonearning parents editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message In connection with other taxation issues in the United States one concern is that these marriages are subsidizing one earner one nonearner parent couples in Social Security and Medicare benefits 8 For example in social security and Medicare two earner couples pay taxes that create a surplus or at least pay for their own benefits and receive reduced benefits such as reduced survivor benefits while one earner couples pay insufficient taxes that create a deficit and receive an extra unfunded benefit of 50 or more in Social Security i e a total of 150 or more and 100 or more in Medicare i e a total of 200 or more This problem is exacerbated by the fact Social Security and Medicare taxes are collected only on wage income passive income such as capital and property earnings are exempt and benefits are progressive This means that the chief tax burden for the programs is carried by two earner families with wages that range between the mid range and the cap and these families also receive fewer benefits than any other family structure or set up Impact of current social security reform proposals and recent Medicare tax reform in the United States edit Proposals to raise the cap will continue to place an extra burden on 2 earner families where each partner has earned income not capital gains or other property based income that is exempt from the tax The Affordable Care Act added a tax on passive income and capital gains to support Medicare citation needed but it is not known if this is sufficient to prevent the heavy burden faced by two earner families in subsidizing sole breadwinner families and especially the burden faced by two earner families with wages between the mid range and the cap No such tax is yet imposed to support progressivity in Social Security benefits Relationship to reduction of government debt editThe Tax Policy Center also sees the current marriage bonus for sole breadwinners as the chief tax expenditure of the Bush tax cuts and a key contributor to the Federal debt 9 The International Monetary Fund has called for the United States Portugal and France all countries with significant sovereign debt to eliminate their practices including income splitting that charge 2 earner families higher taxes over single income families whether married or not 10 Non US residents editThe marriage penalty can be even worse in cases where one spouse is not a citizen or resident of the United States citation needed Although that spouse cannot be required by US law to pay US taxes since the US person is still required by law to file taxes on worldwide income two choices are left The US person may either file as Married Filing Separately or Head of Household if they have at least one qualifying person who is not their spouse or try to convince their spouse to voluntarily pay US income taxes on their income by filing a joint return The former requires using the Married Filing Separately or Head of Household tax brackets which are less beneficial than Married Filing Jointly 11 2 3 The latter allows that person to use the more favorable Married Filing Jointly tax brackets but requires paying tax on the non US person s income which would not be required for two otherwise identical single people See also editBachelor tax Druker v Commissioner of Internal Revenue Income splitting Kiddie tax Shared earning shared parenting marriage Taxation in the United StatesReferences edit https files taxfoundation org 20180216105630 Tax Foundation FF573 pdf bare URL PDF a b https www irs gov pub irs pdf n1036 pdf bare URL PDF a b Kasprak Nick January 3 2013 2013 Tax Brackets Revenue Procedure 2013 15 sec 2 01 Internal Revenue Service U S Dep t of the Treasury Jan 2013 TAX TABLE p 14 Rosen Harvey 1977 Is it time to abandon joint filing National Tax Journal 30 December 423 428 Lovell Michael 1982 On taxing marriages National Tax Journal 35 December 507 510 Howard M Iams Gayle L Reznik Christopher R Tamborini 2009 Earnings Sharing in Social Security Projected Impacts of Alternative Proposals Using the MINT Model Social Security Bulletin Vol 69 No 1 U S Social Security Administration Office of Retirement and Disability Policy Retrieved 3 April 2012 Taxation and the Family What are marriage penalties and bonuses The Tax Policy Center Retrieved 19 October 2013 Yukhananov Anna September 23 2013 IMF warns of slow progress achieving gender equality Reuters Retrieved 26 November 2013 1 See sub heading Non resident Alien Spouse under the Considered Unmarried heading on page 22 3rd column External links editThe Motley Fool Death amp Taxes The Marriage Penalty About com Marriage The Marriage Tax Penalty albuterol24 com Marriage Affects Tax Archived 2022 01 27 at the Wayback Machine Tax Policy Center Tax Topics Marriage Penalty TPC is a joint venture of the Urban Institute and Brookings Institution Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marriage penalty amp oldid 1215844702, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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