Time Magazine Article: Now’s the Time To End Tax Exemptions for Religious Institutions

by AndersonsInfo 18 Replies latest jw friends

  • AndersonsInfo
    AndersonsInfo

    http://time.com/3939143/nows-the-time-to-end-tax-exemptions-for-religious-institutions/?xid=newsletter-brief

    June 28, 2015

    Now’s the Time To End Tax Exemptions for Religious Institutions


    une 28, 2015

    ChurchGetty Images

    Mark Oppenheimer writes the biweekly “Beliefs” column for The New York Times and is editor-at-large for Tablet. He also reports for The Atlantic, The Nation, This American Life, and elsewhere.

    The Supreme Court's ruling on gay marriage makes it clearer than ever that the government shouldn't be subsidizing religion and non-profits


    Two weeks ago, with a decision in Obergefell v. Hodges on the way, Sen. Mike Lee of Utah introduced the First Amendment Defense Act, which ensures that religious institutions won’t lose their tax exemptions if they don’t support same-sex marriage. Liberals tend to think Sen. Lee’s fears are unwarranted, and they can even point to Justice Anthony Kennedy’s opinion in Friday’s case, which promises “that religious organizations and persons [will be] given proper protection.”

    But I don’t think Sen. Lee is crazy. In the 1983 Bob Jones University case, the court ruled that a school could lose tax-exempt status if its policies violated “fundamental national public policy.” So far, the Bob Jones reasoning hasn’t been extended to other kinds of discrimination, but someday it could be. I’m a gay-rights supporter who was elated by Friday’s Supreme Court decision — but I honor Sen. Lee’s fears.

    I don’t, however, like his solution. And he’s not going to like mine. Rather than try to rescue tax-exempt status for organizations that dissent from settled public policy on matters of race or sexuality, we need to take a more radical step. It’s time to abolish, or greatly diminish, their tax-exempt statuses.

    The federal revenue acts of 1909, 1913, and 1917 exempted nonprofits from the corporate excise and income taxes at the same time that they allowed people to deduct charitable contributions from their incomes. In other words, they gave tax-free status to the income of, and to the income donated to, nonprofits. Since then, state and local laws nearly everywhere have exempted nonprofits from all, or most, property tax and state income tax. This system of tax exemptions and deductions took shape partly during World War I, when it was feared that the new income tax, with top rates as high as 77%, might choke off charitable giving. But whatever its intentions, today it’s a mess, for several reasons.

    First, the religious exemption has forced the IRS to decide what’s a religion, and thus has entangled church and state in the worst way. Since the world’s great religion scholars can’t agree on what a religion is, it’s absurd to ask a bunch of accountants, no matter how well-meaning. You can read part of the IRS’s guidelines for what’s a bona fide religion here; suffice it to say that it has an easier time saying what’s not a religion. The site gives the example of the rejection of an application from an “outgrowth of a supper club … whose primary activities were holding meetings before supper, sponsoring the supper club, and publishing a newsletter” but which professed a religious doctrine of “ethical egoism.”

    On the other hand, the IRS famously caved and awarded the Church of Scientology tax-exempt status. Never mind that the Scientology is secretive, or that it charges for its courses; or that its leader, David Miscavige, lives like a pasha. Indeed, many clergy have mid-six-figure salaries — many university presidents, seven-figure salaries — and the IRS doesn’t trouble their tax-exempt status. And many churches and synagogues sit on exceedingly valuable tracts of land (walk up and down Fifth Avenue to see what I mean). The property taxes they aren’t paying have to be drawn from business owners and private citizens — in a real sense, you and I are subsidizing Mormon temples, Muslims mosques, Methodist churches.

    We’re also subsidizing wealthy organizations sitting in the middle of poor towns. Yale University has an endowment of about $25 billion, yet it pays very little to the city of New Haven, which I (as a resident) can assure you needs the money. At the prep school I attended (current endowment: $175 million), faculty houses, owned by the school, were tax-exempt, on the theory that teachers sometimes had students over for dinner, where they talked about history or literature or swim practice.

    Meanwhile, although nonprofits can’t endorse political candidates, they can be quite partisan and still thrive on the public dole, in the form of tax exemptions and deductions. Conservatives are footing the bill for taxes that Planned Parenthood, a nonprofit, doesn’t pay — while liberals are making up revenue lost from the National Rifle Association. I could go on. In short, the exemption-and-deduction regime has grown into a pointless, incoherent agglomeration of nonsensical loopholes, which can allow rich organizations to horde plentiful assets in the midst of poverty.

    Defenders of tax exemptions and deductions argues that if we got rid of them charitable giving would drop. It surely would, although how much, we can’t say. But of course government revenue would go up, and that money could be used to, say, house the homeless and feed the hungry. We’d have fewer church soup kitchens — but countries that truly care about poverty don’t rely on churches to run soup kitchens.

    Exemption advocates also point out that churches would be squeezed out of high-property-value areas. But if it’s important to the people of Fifth Avenue to have a synagogue like Emanu-El or an Episcopal church like St. Thomas in their midst, they should pay full freight for it. They can afford to, more than millions of poorer New Yorkers whose tax bills the synagogue and church exemptions are currently inflating.

    So yes, the logic of gay-marriage rights could lead to a reexamination of conservative churches’ tax exemptions (although, as long as the IRS is afraid of challenging Scientology’s exemption, everyone else is probably safe). But when that day comes, it will be long overdue. I can see keeping some exemptions; hospitals, in particular, are an indispensable, and noncontroversial, public good. And localities could always carve out sensible property-tax exceptions for nonprofits their communities need. But it’s time for most nonprofits, like those of us who faithfully cut checks to them, to pay their fair share.

  • Pubsinger
    Pubsinger

    Personally I think each has to be judged on merit. If a denomination can demonstrate and quantify what it does that is clearly charitable and would be willing to be inspected, I think that a Charitable Status is fine.

    If they cannot or will not, then remove the tax exemption.

    Most churches I believe would pass.

  • Giordano
    Giordano

    There is much to agree with in this POV. Imagine the property taxes the WT saved in Brooklyn. Only to have local residents foot their share of the bill for local schools, the police, fire departments and various other Brooklyn city services.

    "Meanwhile, although nonprofits can’t endorse political candidates, they can be quite partisan and still thrive on the public dole, in the form of tax exemptions and deductions. Conservatives are footing the bill for taxes that Planned Parenthood, a nonprofit, doesn’t pay — while liberals are making up revenue lost from the National Rifle Association. I could go on. In short, the exemption-and-deduction regime has grown into a pointless, incoherent agglomeration of nonsensical loopholes, which can allow rich organizations to horde plentiful assets in the midst of poverty."

  • Doubting Bro
    Doubting Bro
    Agree 100% and have thought this way for a long time. As long as everyone is treated the same, I don't believe taxing these entities based on their profits (the same way every other business is taxed) would infringe on their 1st amendment freedom to worship as they please.
  • sir82
    sir82

    Probably not feasible in the USA to just completely remove the tax-exempt status for any & all religious organizations.

    But it would be nice to have some sort of "charitable value" test imposed - tax-exempt status is maintained only if there is definite measurable benefit provided for the community (and no, "Bible education" wouldn't count).

  • Vidiot
    Vidiot

    Interesting.

    I especially liked this bit:

    "First, the religious exemption has forced the IRS to decide what’s a religion, and thus has entangled church and state in the worst way. Since the world’s great religion scholars can’t agree on what a religion is, it’s absurd to ask a bunch of accountants, no matter how well-meaning."

    Some here have suggested that because the IRS "caved" for the Church of Scientology, the WTS is in no danger of losing its tax-exempt status, but I'm not so sure, for several reasons...

    a) ...the IRS reviews and rescinds the tax-free status of approximately 100 groups per year, and that shows no signs of abating...

    b) ...unlike Scientology, the WTS has not placed high-ranking members throughout the American social and political spheres of influence; they, in fact, have virtually no "friends in high places" who might be negatively impacted (and therefore come to bat for them) should they get in any kind of hot water, and...

    c) ...the WTS doesn't actually do anything "charitable"; arguably the whole reason tax-free status is awarded to any given group in the first place.

    It's occurred to a few of us that - should the tax system (or justice system) reach a point where they may feel compelled to "make an example of someone" - the WTS is an ideal candidate.

  • Rufus T. Firefly
    Rufus T. Firefly
    Thanks, Barbara, for sharing this excellent article. If it can be demonstrated that a so-called religious institution rewrites its history, propagates myths to support a hierarchical authority structure, or conceals human-rights abuses, it should lose its tax-exempt status. Sound like any institution you know?
  • DesirousOfChange
    DesirousOfChange

    In the US, I could see wide support for a change in the law that only allowed property tax exemption for the actual place of worship.

    Further, just as non-religious charities have to prove their charitable status, so should any "religious charity". There should be a public financial statement and there should be requirements for how much of their receipts go to "charity". REAL CHARITABLE CAUSES. Many, so called "religions" would fail this litmus test. WT might be one of them as they seem to do very little in the way of "charity".

    Doc

  • steve2
    steve2

    It would be a formidable task to individually certify a religious organization as actually engaging in "charitable" acts so meets criteria for tax-free status.

    At either end of the spectrum, it would be a no-brainer: Religious organizations that run soup kitchens and/or provide housing for the poor, for example, versus religious organizations that charge phenomenal fees for specialist "training". And in-between is a charity minefield.

    If tax-free status is lost, guess who will be pressured to give even more? The rank and file.

  • Mephis
    Mephis

    From a British perspective, I'd be very much in favour of a much tighter restriction on charitable status being given to religions. I really do not think that 'preaching' should automatically count as a 'public good'. Maintaining a listed building (as JWs do in eg Manchester), should give some exemptions. And those religions which do offer charitable works should of course get an exemption or be able to have those parts of the religion listed as charities in their own right. In effect, push the charitable aspects away from the religious parts as much as possible. Many religions do this already.

    The Plymouth Brethren case here in Britain has already indicated that there is some appetite to look at the idea of 'public good' more broadly. I'd like to see it pushed further, although I think it is an unlikely scenario here without really looking at the role of religion in British society. We still effectively have a state religion after all.

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