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by spaceseaman
3152 days ago
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But it's not funding anything! There is no actual income being made. This is imposing a tax on something that no one actually gets! It's an accounting procedure used by Universities so they can meet the requirements of you being a student by law. I am a PhD student. My tuition of $30,000/year is waived by the University of California since I take no classes and am purely doing research. I need to be a student for various tax purposes for both the University and myself. If the money from my waiver was taxed, I would somehow have to come up with an extra $10,000 out of nowhere! Where do I find that money? My PhD is my job. The government is not funding anything, and I feel you're using that terminology purely to muddy the issue. To be clear, I don't much care for your argument here. Regardless of your ideological concerns about the ideal way to tax stuff, this policy clearly hurts people who are already in a precarious financial position. It will have remarkably negative effects for students like me. I will simply have to drop out, and all of the domestic PhD students I know in STEM will as well. We can't afford to take out loans for taxes... This policy has a clear goal. It's impact is what matters. Simply demanding that the tax code be simplified is in this case ludicrous. You're really missing the forest for the trees here - this effectively kills all STEM PhDs in the United States. It's impact would be devastating. |
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> I need to be a student for various tax purposes for both the University and myself.
That sounds rather...Rube Goldbergian, doesn't it? Why do you think that is? That the university has to charge you a fee, and then waive it? Could it be that they are avoiding some other law, or regulation that is there, and that actually that law is the one that ought to be changed? Does it make sense to simply layer bureaucratic workarounds on top of each other? I'd say no, but some people like spaghetti code, I guess.
> This policy has a clear goal. It's impact is what matters. Simply demanding that the tax code be simplified is in this case ludicrous. You're really missing the forest for the trees here - this effectively kills all STEM PhDs in the United States. It's impact would be devastating.
No it wouldn't. Literally the only thing that would happen is universities would either:
a) Change the absurd "we charge you tuition and then waive it" system.
or
b) Offset the cost delta via a stipend of some kind.
It would not kill STEM, or any other kind of PhD program in the US, and it definitely wouldn't simply be passed on to students. If it did anything, it'd shift the balance more in favor of STEM PhDs and away from other, less remunerative degrees. But I doubt it'd even have that effect at the margin.
And finally, any time the government gives a tax credit, they are funding something. Tax credits are identical to government checks. Understanding this is absolutely essential to thinking about politics. When you donate money to a charity and receive a tax deduction for doing so, the federal government is effectively matching some 30% of your contribution. The reason the government chooses to fund things in this way is that it is more palatable to people. Just as you are doing now, they don't see 'tax credits' as an expenditure. But the truth is that taking money out of revenue collection is the exact same thing as writing a check. And this confusion among the general republic is a prime contributor to government waste and economic inefficiency generally.
EDIT: I should add, to be clear, that I don't think you or any PhD student should actually bear the burden of this tax. I'm saying that the tax policy being the way that it is is a bureaucratic workaround for a problem that is better solved another way, and it ought to be solved in that way, rather than addressed through tax policy.