Wildy Logo
(020) 7242 5778
enquiries@wildy.com

Book of the Month

Cover of Building Safety Act 2022 in Practice: A Guide for Property Lawyers

Building Safety Act 2022 in Practice: A Guide for Property Lawyers

Edited by: Andrew Butler KC, Ian Quayle
Price: £125.00

Lord Denning: Life, Law and Legacy



  


Welcome to Wildys

Watch


NEW EDITION Pre-order The Law of Rights of Light 2nd ed



 Jonathan Karas


Offers for Newly Called Barristers & Students

Special Discounts for Newly Called & Students

Read More ...


Secondhand & Out of Print

Browse Secondhand Online

Read More...


Taxing the Church: Religion, Exemptions, Entanglement, and the Constitution


ISBN13: 9780190853952
Published: December 2017
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Country of Publication: USA
Format: Hardback
Price: £74.00



Despatched in 3 to 5 days.

This book explores the taxation and exemption of churches and other religious institutions, both empirically and normatively. This exploration reveals that churches and other religious institutions are treated diversely by the federal and state tax systems. Sectarian institutions pay more tax than many believe. In important respects, the states differ among themselves in their respective approaches to the taxation of sectarian entities. Either taxing or exempting churches and other sectarian entities entangles church and state. The taxes to which churches are more frequently subject - federal Social Security and Medicare taxes, sales taxes, real estate conveyance taxes - fall on the less entangling end of the spectrum. The taxes from which religious institutions are exempt - general income taxes, value-based property taxes, unemployment taxes - are typically taxes with the greatest potential for church-state enforcement entanglement. It is unpersuasive to reflexively denounce the tax exemption of religious actors and institutions as a subsidy. Tax exemption can implement the secular, non-subsidizing goal of minimizing church-state enforcement entanglement and thus be regarded as part of a normative tax base.

Taxing the church or exempting the church involves often difficult trade-offs among competing and legitimate values. On balance, our federal system of decentralized legislation reasonably make these legal and tax policy trade-offs, though there is room for improvement in particular settings such as the protection of internal church communications and the expansion of the churches' sales tax liabilities.

Subjects:
Other Jurisdictions , USA
Contents:
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter One: The Federal Constitutional Law on Taxation and Religion
A) Murdock and Follett
B) Walz
C) Texas Monthly
D) Jimmy Swaggart Ministries
E) Nyquist and Mueller
F) Lee
G) Conclusion
Chapter Two: State Constitutions on Religion and
Taxation
A) State constitutional exemptions from
property taxation
B) Interpreting "church" for property tax
exemption purposes
C) The property tax status of parsonages
D) Other state constitutional provisions
E) Conclusion
Chapter Three: The Internal Revenue Code and Religious Institutions
A) The Federal Income Tax
B) The Federal Estate and Gift Taxes
C) The FICA and Self-employment Taxes
D) The Federal Unemployment Tax
E) The Federal Health Mandates for
Individuals and Employers
F) The Code's procedural provisions
relative to churches
G) Church retirement plans
H) Conclusion
Chapter Four: State Tax Statutes and Religious
Exemptions
A) Property Tax Exemption Statutes
B) Sales Taxes: Overview
C) States subjecting churches to sales taxes
as both buyers and sellers
D) States exempting churches on sales taxes
as both buyers and sellers
E) States exempting churches as buyers but
not as sellers
F) States exempting churches as sellers but
not as buyers
G) Church sales tax exemption tied to IRS
confirmation of income tax exemption
H) Sales tax: Summary
I) State Income Taxes
J) Real Estate Transfer Taxes
K) State Unemployment Taxes
L) Conclusion
Chapter Five: Untangling Entanglement
A) The Inevitability of Tax-Related
Entanglement: Borderline Entanglement and
Enforcement Entanglement in The Courts
B) Reducing Borderline Entanglement Through
Broader Exemptions or No Exemptions
C) Enforcement Entanglement, Property Taxes
and General Income Taxes
D) Sales, Payroll and Real Estate Conveyance
Taxes: Less Prone to Enforcement
Entanglement
E) The Entangling Taxation of Unrelated
Business Incomes
F) The Entangling Trade-offs of Unemployment
Compensation
G) Entanglement, Subsidization, Tax Policy
Criteria and the Normative Tax Base
H) Why Entanglement Matters
I) Conclusion
Chapter Six: Parsonages, Parsonage Allowances and
the Religious Exemptions From Social
Security Taxes and the Health Care
Mandate
A) The Property Tax Status of Parsonages
B) The Income Tax Treatment of Parsonages
and Parsonage Allowances: Code Sections
107. and 119
C) Repealing Section 107: Swapping
Borderline Entanglement for Enforcement
Entanglement
D) Swapping One Borderline Entanglement
for Another: Section 107 v.
Section 119
E) A Broader Possibility: Neither Section
107. nor Section 119 Applies to Religious Employers
F) Section 107(2) as a Matter of Tax Policy
G) The Constitutionality of the Religious
Exemptions From The Social Security Taxes
and the Individual Health Care Mandate
H) A Final Word on Lemon
I) Conclusion
Chapter Seven: Other Issues For the Future: Churches'
Lobbying, Campaigning, and Sales
Taxation
A) Section 501(c)(3)'s Bans on Substantial
Lobbying and Political Campaigning
B) The Controversy
C) A Proposal to Protect Internal Church
Communications
D) Expanding the Sales Tax Obligations of
Churches
E) Conclusion
Chapter Eight: Constitutional and Tax Policy Issues
A) The Original Understanding of the Religion
Clauses of the First Amendment:
Prohibiting a National Church v. Nonpreferentialism v. Separationism
B) Exempting Churches From Laws of General Applicability: The Relative Merits of
Judicial and Legislative Decisionmaking
C) The Criteria Governing Legislative
Exemptions from Laws of General
Applicability
D) The Rhetoric of Separationism
E) To Tax or Exempt the Profits of
Nonprofits
F) Revisiting the Unrelated Business
Income Tax (UBIT)
G) Conclusion
Conclusion
Index