Santa Fe New Mexican

Jobless face taxes on unemployme­nt payments

- By Heather Long

Erika Rose was shocked this month when she sat down to do her taxes and realized she owed $600 to the federal government. She’s been unemployme­nt since April and has spent much of the winter stretching every penny to pay rent and to keep the lights on. On a recent trip to the grocery store, she only had $20 in her bank account.

“I was so upset. How do I owe over $600 in taxes?” said Rose, 31, who lives in Los Angeles. “I have never been so fearful in my life of how I’m going to pay my bills.”

Rose is among millions of unemployed workers facing surprise tax bills, ranging from several hundred to several thousand dollars, and many say they just can’t pay. For tax purposes, weekly unemployme­nt payments count as income just like wages from a job. But few people realize the money they get from the government is actually taxable. Fewer than 40 percent of the 40 million unemployed workers in 2020 had taxes withheld from their payments, according to The Century Foundation, a left-leaning think tank.

For people who have been without a job for nearly a year, finding money to pay their tax bills is yet another financial burden coming at a fraught time. Advocates for the poor as well as some Democratic lawmakers are trying to get these tax bills waived entirely — or at least reduced.

“I don’t think we should be taxing unemployme­nt insurance benefits, generally, but we really should not be taxing them during a terrible recession,” said Brian Galle, a professor at Georgetown Law. “The right thing to do is just zero out unemployme­nt insurance income from last year.”

Among the unemployed, there was hope that Congress would eliminate taxes on unemployme­nt income, but that provision did not make it into the latest $1.9 trillion bill Democrats are aiming to have on President Joe Biden’s desk by mid-March.

Unemployme­nt insurance was created in 1935 during the Great Depression era as a safety net to help people out of work. For decades, it was not taxed, but in the late 1970s and early 1980s, there was a push to make all forms of income taxable. All unemployme­nt payments were subject to federal income tax by 1986. The thinking was that if a rich person lost their job and collected unemployme­nt, they should still be taxed. Others argued that not taxing unemployme­nt aid might discourage people from looking for work where their wages would be taxed.

“The basic theory is everyone should pay tax on it as income. Just because they are unemployed doesn’t change that,” said Pete Davis, who worked on tax reform in the 1970s and ’80s in Congress.

Outside of a recession, Americans usually remain on unemployme­nt for a few months, so the tax bills are modest. But during recessions or large-scale natural disasters, it’s more common for people to be unemployed for a year or more, causing a much heftier tax bill. That’s why Congress has typically eliminated at least some of the tax bill for the unemployed during past downturns as a way to lessen the financial pain.

States handle taxation of unemployme­nt benefits in very different ways. Nine states don’t have income taxes, so they don’t tax unemployme­nt benefits. Six states — Alabama, California, Montana, New Jersey, Pennsylvan­ia and Virginia — opted not to tax unemployme­nt at the state level. And during the pandemic, Maryland and Delaware decided to temporaril­y not tax unemployme­nt, according to Lucy Dadayan, a senior research associate at the Tax Policy Center.

Some argue that the unemployed should have done a better job saving up for their tax bill. When people fill out the applicatio­n for unemployme­nt aid, there is a box they can check to have taxes withheld, similar to what most people do with paychecks at a job.

But several jobless Americans told the Washington Post that they ended up with hefty tax bills even though they did check the box. Rose is one of them. When she lost her job in April at a company that processes debit and credit card transactio­ns, she made sure to check the box to have taxes withheld. But she still ended up owing the federal government taxes.

It was the same for Taryn Johnston. Since being laid off from her medical aesthetici­an job at a plastic surgery practice when the pandemic escalated, she had the maximum withheld every week from her unemployme­nt checks for taxes. Despite trying to do the right thing, she still ended up owing $1,500 when she sat down recently to fill out her federal and state tax forms for 2020.

“This whole situation is crazy,” said Johnston, 41, who lives in Brooklyn, N.Y. “My savings is gone. Most of my 401(k) is gone. I’m $6,000 in credit card debt and behind on my rent and now I owe the government $1,500 in taxes on my unemployme­nt.”

Johnston says she’s trying to save up money to pay the tax bill by the April 15 deadline. Her best hope is for Congress to pass the $1,400 stimulus checks — money that she would receive and then turn right around and send to the Internal Revenue Service.

“When I get this stimulus check that’s coming, it’s going to end up going to my taxes,” Johnston said.

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