What do you think of when someone uses the word “loophole”? Odds are it’s something negative. You could say Ryan Braun beat the steroid
charge because of a loophole. A loophole
in the law to most people means it’s a way around a law, clearly defeating the
intent of the law. If you ask most folks
what a tax loophole is, they’ll tell you it’s a way to get out of paying a tax
that other folks pay.
Closing a loophole is almost always regarded as a good
thing.
But in the political lexicon of 2012, we’re now hearing a
lot of politicians use the word “loophole” to describe a fully lawful,
long-established tax deduction. Like
home mortgage interest. Kind of like
they use the word “entitlement” when talking about Social Security, lumping it
in with SNAP (food stamps) and other dog-whistle terms that get the Tea People
all wound up.
When I hear politicians talk about closing tax loopholes, I’m
never sure what they mean because they’ve so muddied the term “loophole” the
way they muddied the term “entitlement”.
Don’t tell somebody who paid into Social Security every paycheck for 45
years that it’s an “entitlement” program, unless you want to get a stern
lecture about your use of the word.
Now they’re talking about closing some tax loopholes, so the
nation doesn’t fall off the “fiscal cliff” (another one of those annoying
political terms). To the typical
American dweeb, who wouldn’t know a Schedule A if it bit him on the butt, it
sounds like a good thing. You betcha –
close those loopholes that the rich use to get out of paying taxes! The vast majority of Americans use the 1040ez
form and nearly three-quarters of all Americans now file their annual income
taxes electronically. If you use the
1040ez, you can’t itemize your deductions.
I’ve never used the 1040ez form. There have been quite a few years when my
wife and I filed a tax return over a hundred pages long. Every year, our tax guy, Marshall Mennenga,
helps us figure out how much we should be sending in for estimated quarterly
tax, and he and his staff do all the heavy lifting every year in January when
we provide him with the stuff he asks us to keep track of, and one of the
things we keep track of is how much home mortgage interest we’ve paid in the
past year.
Deducting home mortgage interest is not, as I see it, using
a “loophole”. Home ownership is a good
thing, and one of the many ways the government encourages it, is to allow you
to deduct your mortgage interest cost.
Home ownership, for most people, is the foundation of the American
Dream, and the home mortgage tax deduction helps a lot of people afford to
become homeowners.
Don’t call my home mortgage interest deduction a “loophole”
unless you want an on-the-spot rant from me.
And don’t get me started on Social Security….