Bachelor_tax

Bachelor tax

Bachelor tax

Punitive tax imposed on unmarried men


A bachelor tax is a punitive tax imposed on unmarried men. In the modern era, many countries do vary tax rates by marital status, so current references to bachelor taxes are typically implicit rather than explicit; and given the state of tax law is very complicated, as tax accountancy concepts like income splitting can come into play.[1][2]

Late 19th century illustration and perspective on the bachelor tax.

Such explicit measures historically would be instituted as part of a moral panic or homophobia due to the important status given to marriage at various times and places (as in Ancient Rome, or in various U.S. state legislatures during the early 20th century).[3][4][5][6] Frequently, this would be attached to racial (e.g., as part of Apartheid policies)[5] or nationalistic reasons (as in Fascist Italy or Nazi Germany).[7][8]

More recently, bachelor taxes were viewed as part of a general tax on childlessness, which were used frequently by member states of the Warsaw Pact.[9][10][11]

Timeline

More information Location, Date(s) ...

Rationale

Moral panic and homophobia

During the 19th century in the United States, calls for a bachelor tax were frequently driven by a moral panic,[12] and the bachelor tax was viewed as a way to reform social ills[5][6] either because individuals believed that bachelors had a higher rate of delinquency, or because they believed that many bachelors were closeted homosexuals.[41][42]

Ethnocentrism and eugenics

The bachelor tax has a long history of being used for race-based pronatalism policies. In the early 20th century, this morphed into a general discussion of "race suicide",[3][43] and consequently there was much literature supporting racial-based pronatalist policies, typically in the field of eugenics.[44][36] After such measures were passed in South Africa in an attempt to align white birth rates with black rates,[5] it passed to Benito Mussolini, who explicitly called for it to spread Italian progeny in a speech on May 26, 1927:

Let us be quite clear: what are 40 million Italians compared to 90 million Germans and 200 million Slavs? What are 40 million Italians compared to 40 million Frenchmen, plus 90 million inhabitants of their colonies, or 46 million Englishmen plus 450 million people who live in their colonies?[29]

Thereafter, the idea of the bachelor tax was passed over to Franco's Spain, Nazi Germany, was discussed in Bulgarian Fascist circles, and became a staple of Fascist propaganda in general.[36][45][3]

Communist family planning

Many Warsaw Pact countries instituted some form of a bachelor tax, such as the Soviet Union,[35] Poland,[11] Romania,[9][39] and Bulgaria.[37] Typically, it formed a part of Communist natalist policies, the taxes on childlessness, and family planning policies that were instituted in Communist countries[10] at around the same time in order to increase falling fertility rates.[46][47]

Analysis and present day

Today, bachelor taxes have for the most part been superseded by the inclusion of marital status in the tax code.[48] The first distinction in marital status as part of an income tax happened in the U.S. by 1930 after Poe v. Seaborn, where "income-splitting" was allowed in community property states. Therefore, until 1948, tax rates amongst married and bachelors differed based on one's state of residence. This disparity lead to joint-filing status being allowed by U.S. Federal tax law in 1948 to attempt to harmonize the tax code between community property and common law states.[49] After the war, joint filing and marital status began to be incorporated instead of explicit bachelor taxes into the U.S. tax system and soon spread to other tax systems around the world.[50][2]

According to a 2010 study in the Journal of the Society for the Anthropology of Europe, the utility of the tax has been mixed, as analysis of past historical episodes have questioned the reliability of the tax to results in pronatalist outcomes. In Fascist Italy, it was found to be ineffective, as birth and marriage rates actually decreased.[51] In the Soviet Union, the effect on the fertility rate of the policy was likewise inconclusive; and it was also found to be fairly regressive, as it tended to hit rural, poorer bachelors hardest.[37] However, modern day implementations of taxation based on marital status in the U.S. has found a positive correlation with marriage rate.[52]

See also


References

General references

  • Long, George (1875). "Lex Papia Poppaea". A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities: 691–692.
  • Treggiari, S. (1993). Roman Marriage: Iusti Coniuges from the Time of Cicero to the Time of Ulpian. Oxford and New York: Clarendon Press.

Inline citations

  1. Bird, Richard M. (1978). "On the Importance of Tax Details: Joint vs. Individual Filing". National Tax Journal. Vol. 31, no. 2. National Tax Association. pp. 203–04. JSTOR 41863114.
  2. Allègre, G.; Périvier, H.; Pucci, M. (2021-03-20). "Taxation of Couples and Marital Status – Simulation of Three Reforms of the Marital Quotient in France". Économie et Statistique / Economics and Statistics. pp. 526–527.
  3. Kornhauser, Marjorie E. (July 12, 2012). "Taxing Bachelors in America: 1895-1939". Tulane Public Law Research Paper No. 17-7. doi:10.2139/ssrn.2934318.
  4. Aulus Gellius (1795). The Attic Nights. Printed for J. Johnson ... Retrieved 18 March 2016.
  5. Barnett, Le Roy (2013, Winter). "The Attempts to Tax Bachelors in Michigan". Historical Society of Michigan, pp. 18-19.
  6. "Jersey's Bachelor's Tax." New York Times. 13 February 1898.
  7. J. Pollard, The Fascist Experience in Italy, London, 1998, pp. 78-9.
  8. "Mussolini Imposes Tax on Bachelors." The Evening Independence. 10 December 1926.
  9. "Romanian Pro-Natalism by Max Rudert on Prezi". prezi.com. Retrieved 2014-09-14.
  10. "Tax on childlessness, which existed in the Soviet Union, proposed to be restored" ("Налог на бездетность, существовавший в СССР, предлагают восстановить") http://www.finiz.ru/cfin/tmpl-art/id_art-1054929 (accessed January 3, 2010.)
  11. Art. 20 Dekretu z dnia 26 października 1950 r. o podatku dochodowym, j.t. Dz.U. nr 7 z 1957 r., poz. 26.
  12. Hulme, Roland (July 2017). "Ye old taxes". Vol. 21, no. 5. Renaissance Magazine. Before the days of the eligible bachelor, unmarried men were seen as rather unseemly.
  13. Hugh Chrisholm (1910). The Encyclopædia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and General Information. Vol. 3. University Press. p. 132. with its late and countess of Nevers, to Auxerre in 1223, an annual tax of five rare variant baccalaris—cf. Ital. baccalare—through 0. Fr. solidi is imposed on any man qui non habet uxorem et est bachebacheler)...Instances of this are the is still involved in a certain amount of obscurity. The derivation act (6 and 7 Will. III.) passed in 1695; the tax on servants, from Welsh bach, little, is mentioned as "possible " by Skeat 1785; and the income tax, 1798. (Etymological Dictionary), but is definitely discarded by the New
  14. Coşgel, Metin M. (2005). "Efficiency and Continuity in Public Finance: The Ottoman System of Taxation" (PDF). Int. J. Middle East Stud. 37 (4): 567–586. doi:10.1017/s0020743805052207. S2CID 6972997.
  15. Gumuscu, Osman (2004). "Internal migrations in sixteenth century Anatolia". Journal of Historical Geography. 30 (2): 231–248. doi:10.1016/j.jhg.2003.08.021.
  16. Gibson, Jeremy. The Hearth Tax, Other Later Stuart Tax Lists, and the Association Oath Rolls: FFHS, 1996.
  17. Charles Arnold-Baker (2001). The Companion to British History. Routledge.
  18. "A copy of Assessor’s General alphabetical lists of Taxable property in Boone county Mo for the year 1821". Boone County, O. Harris Sheriff & Collector. Received auditors office, August 2nd, 1821.
  19. Bill Eddleman (2021-07-22). "Missouri Bicentennial Minutes: The Bachelor Tax". KRCU Public Radio. Retrieved 2022-03-07.
  20. Roddam, Rick (July 9, 2020). "Wyoming's First Tax Controversy: The Proposed Bachelor Tax of 1890". 101.9 KING FM. Retrieved 2021-07-20.
  21. STATE EX REL. PIERCE ET AL., APPELLANTS, v. GOWDY, COUNTY TREASURER, RESPONDENT, 62 Mont. 119; 203 P. 1115; 1922 Mont. LEXIS 5 (Montana Supreme Court 1922)
  22. "Montana Man Refuses to Pay Bachelor Tax" (PDF). Batavia Daily Times. 1924-05-23. Event occurs at 16:00.
  23. “The Tax on Bachelors”, The Social Hygiene Bulletin, v. 8, June 1921, p. 5.
  24. "Montana's Bachelor Tax Declared Void." Milwaukee Sentinel. 12 January 1922.
  25. "Italian Bachelor Tax". The Times, London. 1927-02-11.
  26. V. De Grazia, How Fascism Ruled Women: Italy 1922-1945, Los Angeles, 1992, p. 44.
  27. Pollard, John (2005). The Fascist Experience in Italy. Routledge. p. 81. ISBN 9781134819041. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  28. "Italian Bachelor Tax". The Times, London. 1928-01-08.
  29. "Italian Bachelor Tax". The Times, London. 1928-03-15.
  30. Schmitz-Berning, p. 122.
  31. Friedrich Hartmannsgruber, Die Regierung Hitler volume 3 1936, Munich: Oldenbourg, 2002, ISBN 978-3-7646-1839-1, p. 17 (in German)
  32. "Consider Plan of Bachelor Tax." Schenectady Gazette. 23 April 1934.
  33. Chamie, Joseph; Mirkin, Barry (March 2, 2012). "Childless by Choice". YaleGlobal Online. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  34. Turda, Marius (2009). "The biology of war: eugenics in Hungary, 1914-1918". Austrian History Yearbook. Vol. 40. Cambridge University Press.
  35. Ironside, Kristy (2017). "Between Fiscal, Ideological, and Social Dilemmas: The Soviet 'Bachelor Tax' and Post-War Tax Reform, 1941–1962". Europe-Asia Studies. Vol. 69, no. 6. pp. 855–78. Bulgaria attempted to institute a bachelor tax in 1943 but the measure proved controversial and was eventually abandoned (Baloutzova [2], pp. 222–23, 236–43). In 1968, it introduced a socialist version for both sexes similar to the Soviet model (Brunnbauer & Taylor [ 4], p. 301)... the bachelor tax does not stimulate population growth but, just the opposite
  36. Semiz, Yaşar (2010). "Turkey's Population Growth Policy During the 1923-1950 Period and the Issue of Compulsory Marriage Law (Bachelor Tax)". Selçuk Üniversitesi Türkiyat Araştırmaları Dergisi. Vol. 27. pp. 423–469.
  37. ""Celula de bază a societăţii, oficial indivizibilă". Archived from the original on 2015-02-11. Retrieved 2015-02-11.." Jurnalul Național, 13 Mar 2009. Online.
  38. "Stanley, Alessandra (16 November 1999). "Vastogirardi Journal; Blissful Bachelorhood and the Shrinking Village". The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-02-11.." New York Times. 16 November 1999.
  39. Hemphill, C. Dallett (September 2011). "Reviewed Work: Sex and the Eighteenth-Century Man: Massachusetts and the History of Sexuality in America by Thomas Foster". Journal of the History of Sexuality. Vol. 20, no. 3. pp. 630–634. showing more change over time in attitudes towards unmarried men. While Foster refers to newspaper jests about a bachelor tax, for example, McCurdy tells their actual story. Foster does intervene in the acts versus identities debate over homosexuality
  40. Blount, Jackie M. (2000). "Spinsters, Bachelors, and Other Gender Transgressors in School Employment, 1850-1990". Review of Educational Research. 70 (1): 83–101. JSTOR 1170595. "A bachelor is considered 'odd' or 'peculiar,' vain, selfish, and even a delinquent member of society" At the time, the terms "odd" and "peculiar" (especially when wrapped by quotation marks) were sometimes used as code for "homosexual" in polite conversation.
  41. Miriam King and Steven Ruggles (Winter 1990). "American Immigration, Fertility, and Race Suicide at the Turn of the Century". Journal of Interdisciplinary History. No. 20. p. 348.
  42. Carl Ipsen (September 1998). "Population Policy in the Age of Fascism: Observations on Recent Literature". Population and Development Review. Vol. 24, no. 3. pp. 579–592.
  43. Nicholas Farrell (2001-07-21). "Fascist family values". Vol. 287, no. 9024. Spectator.
  44. Z., Goldman, Wendy (1993). Women, the state, and revolution : Soviet family policy and social life, 1917-1936. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521458160. OCLC 27434899.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  45. Avdeev, Alexandre; Blum, Alain; Troitskaya, Irina (1995). "The History of Abortion Statistics in Russia and the USSR from 1900 to 1991". Population: An English Selection. 7: 39–66. JSTOR 2949057.
  46. Rosenbaum, Dan T. (August 2000), Taxes, the Earned Income Tax Credit, and Marital Status, JCPR Working Papers 177, Northwestern University/University of Chicago Joint Center for Poverty Research, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.202.1488
  47. Thompson, Steven C.; Randall K. Serrett (2002-12-01). "Tax Filing Status--Are Joint Tax Returns Always Best?". The National Public Accountant.
  48. Montanari, I. (2000-01-01). "From Family Wage to Marriage Subsidy and Child Benefits: Controversy and Consensus in the Development of Family Support". Journal of European Social Policy.
  49. Forcucci, Lauren E. (2010). "Battle for Births: The Fascist Pronatalist Campaign in Italy 1925 to 1938". Journal of the Society for the Anthropology of Europe (JSAE). Vol. 10, no. 1. pp. 4–13. the battle for births had failed by 1938. The birthrate actually went down between the years 1927 and 1934, along with the marriage rate.
  50. Fisher, Hayley (2013). "The Effect of Marriage Tax Penalties and Subsidies on Marital Status". Fiscal Studies. Vol. 34, no. 4. pp. 437–65. JSTOR 24440312.

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