Not room for entire article. Continued in next thread
The entire article is written by Nina Olson......nothing has been added by me.
Example 1: Separated Parent Who Receives Public Assistance for Her Household
Here, a mother who lived separate and apart from her spouse for many years is raising her three children (all under the age of 13) on her own. She earns $ 7,500 a year as part of her state's welfare to work program. She also receives food stamps, section 8 housing benefits, state fuel assistance, and Medicaid for her children. Before 2005, she could not claim the dependency exemption or head of household status because the government provided more than half the cost of support of her children and could not claim head of household status because she was considered married under section 7703. Under UDOC, because her children meet the age, relationship, and residency tests, she can claim the dependency exemption. However, she still does not meet the "not married" test of section 7703(b) because she does not provide more than one-half the cost of maintaining the household. Because she must file married filing separately, she is not eligible to receive the EITC.
Example 2: Nonresident Parent Provides Support for Child Living With Grandparents
A six-year-old boy lives the entire year with his grandparents, who are married and have $ 12,000 in pension income for the year. Throughout the year, the boy's father sent payments totaling $ 25,000 to the grandparents for the support of the child. The boy is the qualifying child of the grandparents because the relationship, residency, and age tests are met. Even though the father provided more than half the support of his son, the father may not claim his son as a qualifying child because the father did not share a principal place of abode with his son. Also, the father may not claim his son as a qualifying relative because the son is a qualifying child of the grandparents.
Example 3: Teenage Twins With Deceased Parents Who Live With a Neighbor
The twins are qualifying children with respect to each other (they meet the residency, relationship, and age tests). The neighbor provides all of the support for the teenage children, but under the current rules would not be able to claim the children as qualifying relatives because each child is a qualifying child of the other./8/
Example 4: Live-In Boyfriend Who Provides Support for Girlfriend and Her Child
A single mother lives with her boyfriend and her 10-year-old son. The mother has no earned income; the boyfriend earns $ 30,000 per year and supports his girlfriend and her son. Under the current rules, the son is the qualifying child of the girlfriend (he meets the residency, relationship, and age tests). The boyfriend may not claim the girlfriend's son as a qualifying child unless the boy is a foster child placed with the boyfriend by an authorized placement agency or by a court./9/ The boyfriend may not claim the girlfriend's son as a qualifying relative because the son is the qualifying child of the girlfriend. Also, if the relationship is in violation of local law, the girlfriend will not be considered to be a member of the boyfriend's household for determination of household status./10/
Example 5: Affluent Family With a Boomerang Older Child
The parents in this home earn $ 400,000 and live with their 28- year-old son, who earns $ 25,000 a year as a medical resident, and two teenage daughters. The daughters are qualifying children of the parents (the daughters meet the residency, relationship, and age tests), but the parents do not benefit from claiming dependency deductions for their daughters because of the alternative minimum tax. Under the current rules, if the parents do not claim the daughters as dependents, the 28-year-old son can claim his younger siblings as qualified children./11/
Example 6: Another Taxpayer With a Boomerang Older Child
A single parent in this home earns $ 75,000. The 28-year-old son earns $ 10,000 in income and is living at home with his parent. The son meets the relationship and residency tests but fails the age test for a qualifying child. The son is not a qualifying relative because he makes more than the exemption amount./12/ Thus, the single parent cannot claim the child for purposes of the dependency exemption or the head of household status. In 2004 the parent could have filed as head of household, because there was no "exemption amount" limitation.
Now, I don't think Congress thought specifically about most of those cases when it passed the law -- I know I certainly didn't identify them and I have spent decades studying and teaching the code's family status provisions as well as representing taxpayers before the IRS and the courts in disputes involving those provisions. But now that they are identified, what do we do about them? Well, for one thing, we can eliminate the problem in Examples 2 through 4 by adding two simple words -- "claimed as" -- to section 152(d)(1)(D) so that the term "qualifying relative" means an individual "who is not claimed as a qualifying child of such taxpayer or of any other taxpayer for any taxable year in the calendar year in which such taxable year begins."
I note that this change would treat taxpayers as mature individuals who are able to structure their affairs rationally and decide among themselves who is the "right" person to claim various family status benefits. I also note that although this change would give the taxpayer an opportunity to qualify as a qualifying relative, the taxpayer would still have to pass the support test, the child's income (if any) would have to be less than the exemption amount, and in some instances (for example, the live-in boyfriend) the taxpayer would have to not be in a relationship that violates local law./13/ All of those limitations were in the code before enactment of the UDOC. So all we've done with this change is open the door for the taxpayer to qualify as a qualifying relative.
The fifth example is more difficult. Here, allowing taxpayers to decide among themselves enables taxpayers to game the system, or at least come up with a result that doesn't really reflect the economic responsibilities and circumstances of the household./14/
One solution would be to bring back the recently repealed "cares for" test as applied to siblings./15/ The "cares for" test was difficult to administer and involved the submission of a great deal of personal information by the taxpayer and the exercise of discretion by IRS examination employees. One approach to the fact scenario in Example 5 would be to brush off the "cares for" requirement and make that a qualifier for a brother or sister when, and only when, the child lives with the brother or sister and someone else who could claim the child as a qualifying child (for example, the wealthy parents). That antiabuse rule would apply to a very small universe of taxpayers, would correct a longstanding flaw in the EITC as well as the new UDOC, and would not undermine the goal of uniformity in the definition of a child among the family status provisions, which benefits a very large universe of taxpayers.
The administration has advocated a different approach to prevent the result in Example 5. Treasury's proposal would allow only a parent to claim a child as a qualifying child if a parent resides with the child for over half the year. The parent could waive the child-related tax benefits to another member of the household who has a higher AGI./16/
The parents in Example 6 may be able to claim the son as a dependent if the son meets the requirements for a qualifying relative. There is no age requirement for qualifying relatives, so being 28 is not a problem. But because the son makes more than the $ 3,200 exemption amount, he is not considered a qualifying relative of his parents. Note that if the son was between jobs and earned less than the exemption amount, the parents would be able to claim head of household status and claim the son as a dependent. Is that really an unreasonable policy? If your able-bodied adult child has an economic setback, all U.S. taxpayers will help that person get on his feet via the tax system. But if the able-bodied adult child is staying at home to save dollars, Congress has said, fine, but we can't ask all the other taxpayers to subsidize that decision.
The entire article is written by Nina Olson......nothing has been added by me.
Example 1: Separated Parent Who Receives Public Assistance for Her Household
Here, a mother who lived separate and apart from her spouse for many years is raising her three children (all under the age of 13) on her own. She earns $ 7,500 a year as part of her state's welfare to work program. She also receives food stamps, section 8 housing benefits, state fuel assistance, and Medicaid for her children. Before 2005, she could not claim the dependency exemption or head of household status because the government provided more than half the cost of support of her children and could not claim head of household status because she was considered married under section 7703. Under UDOC, because her children meet the age, relationship, and residency tests, she can claim the dependency exemption. However, she still does not meet the "not married" test of section 7703(b) because she does not provide more than one-half the cost of maintaining the household. Because she must file married filing separately, she is not eligible to receive the EITC.
Example 2: Nonresident Parent Provides Support for Child Living With Grandparents
A six-year-old boy lives the entire year with his grandparents, who are married and have $ 12,000 in pension income for the year. Throughout the year, the boy's father sent payments totaling $ 25,000 to the grandparents for the support of the child. The boy is the qualifying child of the grandparents because the relationship, residency, and age tests are met. Even though the father provided more than half the support of his son, the father may not claim his son as a qualifying child because the father did not share a principal place of abode with his son. Also, the father may not claim his son as a qualifying relative because the son is a qualifying child of the grandparents.
Example 3: Teenage Twins With Deceased Parents Who Live With a Neighbor
The twins are qualifying children with respect to each other (they meet the residency, relationship, and age tests). The neighbor provides all of the support for the teenage children, but under the current rules would not be able to claim the children as qualifying relatives because each child is a qualifying child of the other./8/
Example 4: Live-In Boyfriend Who Provides Support for Girlfriend and Her Child
A single mother lives with her boyfriend and her 10-year-old son. The mother has no earned income; the boyfriend earns $ 30,000 per year and supports his girlfriend and her son. Under the current rules, the son is the qualifying child of the girlfriend (he meets the residency, relationship, and age tests). The boyfriend may not claim the girlfriend's son as a qualifying child unless the boy is a foster child placed with the boyfriend by an authorized placement agency or by a court./9/ The boyfriend may not claim the girlfriend's son as a qualifying relative because the son is the qualifying child of the girlfriend. Also, if the relationship is in violation of local law, the girlfriend will not be considered to be a member of the boyfriend's household for determination of household status./10/
Example 5: Affluent Family With a Boomerang Older Child
The parents in this home earn $ 400,000 and live with their 28- year-old son, who earns $ 25,000 a year as a medical resident, and two teenage daughters. The daughters are qualifying children of the parents (the daughters meet the residency, relationship, and age tests), but the parents do not benefit from claiming dependency deductions for their daughters because of the alternative minimum tax. Under the current rules, if the parents do not claim the daughters as dependents, the 28-year-old son can claim his younger siblings as qualified children./11/
Example 6: Another Taxpayer With a Boomerang Older Child
A single parent in this home earns $ 75,000. The 28-year-old son earns $ 10,000 in income and is living at home with his parent. The son meets the relationship and residency tests but fails the age test for a qualifying child. The son is not a qualifying relative because he makes more than the exemption amount./12/ Thus, the single parent cannot claim the child for purposes of the dependency exemption or the head of household status. In 2004 the parent could have filed as head of household, because there was no "exemption amount" limitation.
Now, I don't think Congress thought specifically about most of those cases when it passed the law -- I know I certainly didn't identify them and I have spent decades studying and teaching the code's family status provisions as well as representing taxpayers before the IRS and the courts in disputes involving those provisions. But now that they are identified, what do we do about them? Well, for one thing, we can eliminate the problem in Examples 2 through 4 by adding two simple words -- "claimed as" -- to section 152(d)(1)(D) so that the term "qualifying relative" means an individual "who is not claimed as a qualifying child of such taxpayer or of any other taxpayer for any taxable year in the calendar year in which such taxable year begins."
I note that this change would treat taxpayers as mature individuals who are able to structure their affairs rationally and decide among themselves who is the "right" person to claim various family status benefits. I also note that although this change would give the taxpayer an opportunity to qualify as a qualifying relative, the taxpayer would still have to pass the support test, the child's income (if any) would have to be less than the exemption amount, and in some instances (for example, the live-in boyfriend) the taxpayer would have to not be in a relationship that violates local law./13/ All of those limitations were in the code before enactment of the UDOC. So all we've done with this change is open the door for the taxpayer to qualify as a qualifying relative.
The fifth example is more difficult. Here, allowing taxpayers to decide among themselves enables taxpayers to game the system, or at least come up with a result that doesn't really reflect the economic responsibilities and circumstances of the household./14/
One solution would be to bring back the recently repealed "cares for" test as applied to siblings./15/ The "cares for" test was difficult to administer and involved the submission of a great deal of personal information by the taxpayer and the exercise of discretion by IRS examination employees. One approach to the fact scenario in Example 5 would be to brush off the "cares for" requirement and make that a qualifier for a brother or sister when, and only when, the child lives with the brother or sister and someone else who could claim the child as a qualifying child (for example, the wealthy parents). That antiabuse rule would apply to a very small universe of taxpayers, would correct a longstanding flaw in the EITC as well as the new UDOC, and would not undermine the goal of uniformity in the definition of a child among the family status provisions, which benefits a very large universe of taxpayers.
The administration has advocated a different approach to prevent the result in Example 5. Treasury's proposal would allow only a parent to claim a child as a qualifying child if a parent resides with the child for over half the year. The parent could waive the child-related tax benefits to another member of the household who has a higher AGI./16/
The parents in Example 6 may be able to claim the son as a dependent if the son meets the requirements for a qualifying relative. There is no age requirement for qualifying relatives, so being 28 is not a problem. But because the son makes more than the $ 3,200 exemption amount, he is not considered a qualifying relative of his parents. Note that if the son was between jobs and earned less than the exemption amount, the parents would be able to claim head of household status and claim the son as a dependent. Is that really an unreasonable policy? If your able-bodied adult child has an economic setback, all U.S. taxpayers will help that person get on his feet via the tax system. But if the able-bodied adult child is staying at home to save dollars, Congress has said, fine, but we can't ask all the other taxpayers to subsidize that decision.
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