U
UDS
Guest
Re: Individualisation
Hi Dynamo
I take your point. From a legal point of view I'm not sure that the challenge would have a great chance of succeeding, but from a political/ethical point of view the argument for conferring legal advantages (of any kind, tax or otherwise) on married couples at the expense of unmarried people does lose its force if people are not free to marry.
Incidentally, we still have a "marriage-favouring" system in that individualisation is only partial. A single-income couple on a given level of income will pay more tax than a dual-income couple on that level of income, but they still pay less tax than two unmarried people whose aggregate income is at that level. So the material for a challenge is still there.
To my mind the appopriate response to this point is not to withdraw legal recognition from marriage, but to allow gay couples to marry. But I think that's not likely any time soon.
I feel another great debate coming on . . .
Hi Dynamo
I take your point. From a legal point of view I'm not sure that the challenge would have a great chance of succeeding, but from a political/ethical point of view the argument for conferring legal advantages (of any kind, tax or otherwise) on married couples at the expense of unmarried people does lose its force if people are not free to marry.
Incidentally, we still have a "marriage-favouring" system in that individualisation is only partial. A single-income couple on a given level of income will pay more tax than a dual-income couple on that level of income, but they still pay less tax than two unmarried people whose aggregate income is at that level. So the material for a challenge is still there.
To my mind the appopriate response to this point is not to withdraw legal recognition from marriage, but to allow gay couples to marry. But I think that's not likely any time soon.
I feel another great debate coming on . . .