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CRS Reviews Higher Education Tax Incentives

FEB. 11, 2011

RL32554

DATED FEB. 11, 2011
DOCUMENT ATTRIBUTES
Citations: RL32554

 

Mark P. Keightley

 

Analyst in Public Finance

 

 

February 11, 2011

 

 

Congressional Research Service

 

7-5700

 

www.crs.gov

 

RL32554

 

 

Summary

Government subsidies for education are available at the federal, state, and local levels. Governments employ two types of direct spending programs to help families pay for higher education: subsidies to public postsecondary institutions and need-based aid to students and families. The Higher Education Act (HEA) authorizes many need-based student aid programs, which provide grants, loans, and work-study assistance. In addition to these direct spending programs, government subsidies for higher education are also made through the income tax system.

This report discusses tax incentives that provide benefits to taxpayers for the expenditures they make on higher education in a given year. The tax benefits can be divided into three groups: incentives for current year expenses, incentives for preferential tax treatment of student loan expenses, and incentives for saving for college. Incentives for current expenses include three tax credits, the Hope, American Opportunity, and Lifetime Learning tax credits; two deductions, an above-the-line deduction for tuition and fees (sometimes referred to as the Higher Education Deduction) and a deduction for work-related education; exclusions for scholarship and fellowship income, tuition reductions, and employer-provided education benefits; and a personal exemption for student dependents aged 19 to 23. Tax benefits for student loan expenses include a deduction for interest paid on student loan interest and an exclusion for student loans that have been forgiven. College saving tax incentives include Qualified Tuition Plans (529 plans); Coverdell Education Savings Accounts; an education savings bond program; withdrawals from individual retirement accounts (IRAs) to pay for college expenses without penalty; and the allowance of uniform transfers to minors.

The Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-312) recently extended a number of temporary enhancements to higher education tax benefits. Specifically, the act extended through 2012 the following changes: (1) the American Opportunity tax credit, (2) the expanded Coverdell accounts, (3) the expanded exclusion for employer-provided assistance exclusion, (4) the expanded above-the-line deduction for student loan interest, and (5) the exclusion of certain scholarship income. The act also extended through 2011 the above-the-line deduction for tuition and fees.

This report provides an overview of the tax benefits for higher education, along with cost estimates of the revenue loss associated with these provisions. The report concludes with a discussion of the beneficiaries of education tax incentives. See also CRS Report RL32507, Higher Education Tax Credits: An Economic Analysis, by Mark P. Keightley, which provides a discussion of the economic rationale for subsidizing higher education along with a discussion of the efficiency and effectiveness of tax credits.

This report will be updated in the event of significant legislative events.

                    Contents

 

 

 An Overview of Education Tax Incentives

 

 

 Benefits for Tuition and Other Fees

 

 

      Hope Credit

 

 

           American Opportunity Tax Credit

 

 

      Lifetime Learning Tax Credit

 

 

      Tuition and Fees Deduction

 

 

      Business Expense Deduction of Work-Related Education

 

 

      Exclusion of Scholarship and Fellowship Income

 

 

      Exclusion of Tuition Reduction

 

 

      Exclusion of Employer-Provided Educational Assistance

 

 

      Parental Personal Exemption for Dependent Students Age 19-23

 

 

 Student Loans

 

 

      Student Loan Interest Deduction

 

 

      Student Loan Forgiveness

 

 

 Incentives to Save for College Expenses

 

 

      Qualified Tuition Programs (QTPs)

 

 

      Coverdell Education Savings Accounts (ESAs)

 

 

      Education Savings Bond Program

 

 

      Early Withdrawals from Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs)

 

 

      Uniform Transfers to Minors

 

 

 Beneficiaries of Education Tax Incentives

 

 

      An Economic Perspective

 

 

      A Comparison of Households

 

 

      Who Benefits From Education-Related Tax Exclusions?

 

 

      Who Benefits From Education-Related Tax Deductions?

 

 

      Who Benefits From Education Tax Credits?

 

 

      Simplicity

 

 

 Tables

 

 

 Table 1. By Adjusted Gross Income, Income Tax Returns Filed in 2006

 

 

 Table 2. By Adjusted Gross Income, the Number and Amount of Student

 

          Loan Interest Deductions Claimed in 2006

 

 

 Table 3. By Adjusted Gross Income, Number and Amount of Education Tax

 

          Credits Claimed in 2006

 

 

 Contacts

 

 

 Author Contact Information

 

 

Government subsidies for education are provided at the federal, state, and local levels. Governments mainly employ two types of direct subsidies to help families pay for higher education. First, direct appropriations are made by many state and local governments to public postsecondary institutions. A majority of this funding is used to minimize tuition charges for in-state students.

A second form of direct public subsidy is need-based aid to students and families. This category represents the largest share of student financial aid. Current education subsidies provided by the federal government include student loans, grants, and work-study programs. Both of the major federal grant programs, Pell Grants and Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants (FSEOG), are need-based. There are also many specialized grants and scholarship programs offered federally for students at the graduate level. The Federal Work Study program and the Student Educational Employment programs allow students to earn money while in school.

The recipients of benefits through the tax system can be quite different from the benefits provided through spending programs. First, because none of these provisions are available to families whose incomes are too low to pay income taxes, some low income individuals (including independent students) cannot benefit from the provisions. Even those who pay some income taxes may not receive the full benefit of education tax incentives due to limited tax liabilities. By contrast, direct spending programs are often directed toward lower income individuals who are more likely to attend public institutions and to qualify for need-based aid. This limit on the ability to benefit lower income individuals may limit the incentive effects of education tax provisions (at least with respect to college enrollment) if lower income individuals are more sensitive to price than higher income individuals (who are likely to send their children to college in any case). If so, the education tax provisions may be largely seen as incentives that provide tax reduction without altering enrollment (although perhaps altering either or both the quality and affordability of education).

In addition, the target of these provisions may shift when other, unrelated, changes are made to the tax code. For example, the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (EGTRRA, P.L. 107-16) reduced marginal income tax rates for individuals, resulting in lower tax burdens. In providing tax relief that was designed to stimulate the economy, households experienced a reduction in their income tax liability which led to a decrease in the number of taxpayers eligible to claim education tax benefits. These tax reductions may have caused them to become unable to claim education tax benefits, because they either had reduced tax liability to offset the education provisions or no longer owed any tax.

Moreover, within the group of tax benefits, the method of providing the benefits has differential effects across types of families and students, an issue that will be addressed in the final section of this report.

An Overview of Education Tax Incentives

In addition to direct spending programs administered by the U.S. Department of Education and other executive branch agencies, government subsidies for higher education are also made through the federal income tax system. From 1954 to 1978, four tax benefits for education existed: an exclusion for scholarship and fellowship income, a parental exemption for students age 19 to 23 who were enrolled in college, a business expense deduction or adjustment to income for work-related education, and the deduction of student loan interest. In 1978 an exclusion for employer-provided education assistance was enacted, and 10 years later an exclusion for the interest earned on educational savings bonds was enacted. The deductibility of student loan interest was eliminated with the passage of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 (P.L. 99-514), which disallowed all forms of personal interest deduction. In 1996, after the enactment of an exclusion for earnings from qualified tuition programs (QTPs), also known as Section 529 Plans, the number of tax benefits for higher education expenses rose to six.

Five new education tax benefits were enacted by The Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 (P.L. 105-34), nearly doubling the number of subsidies available through the tax system for higher education expenses. Those tax benefits include two tax credits, a reinstatement of the deduction for interest on student loans, an exclusion for earnings accruing to Education IRAs (later renamed Coverdell Education Savings Accounts), and a cancellation of the penalty for early withdrawal from individual retirement accounts (IRAs). The provisions were estimated to cost $41 billion over five years1 and represented the largest increase in federal funding for higher education since the GI Bill.2 Additionally, in the fall of 2001, an above-the-line deduction for higher education expenses was authorized by the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (P.L. 10716). An above-the-line deduction means that it is subtracted from taxpayer income before deductions or exemptions are claimed and lowers adjusted gross income (AGI).3 This final incentive increased the number of tax benefits for higher education expenses to 12.

The benefits can be divided into three groups: incentives for current year higher education expenses, incentives that give preferential tax treatment of student loan expenses, and incentives for saving for college. Descriptions of these tax provisions are provided in the following sections. There are several tax benefits for providers of higher education. These include tax an exemption for educational institutions, deductibility of charitable contributions to educational institutions, and certain tax-exempt and tax-preferred bond provisions. These benefits are not discussed in this report.

Benefits for Tuition and Other Fees

There are a number of tax incentives to assist households with paying for college. These include the Hope, American Opportunity, and Lifetime Learning tax credits; deductions for tuition and fees, and work-related education expenses; exclusions for scholarship and fellowship income, tuition reductions, and employer-provided education benefits; and a personal exemption for student dependents aged 19 to 23.

 

Hope Credit

 

Generally, the Hope Credit is a nonrefundable credit that may be claimed for the college tuition and fees paid for each eligible student in the taxpayer's family. The student must be enrolled at least half-time in one of the first two years of postsecondary education and must be enrolled in a program leading to a degree, certificate, or other recognized educational credential.

For tax year 2008, the amount of credit that may be claimed is equal to 100% of the first $1,200 of the taxpayer's out-of-pocket expenses for each student's tuition and fees, plus 50% of the next $1,200 of the taxpayer's out-of-pocket expenses for each student's qualified tuition and related expenses. In order for the maximum amount of the Hope credit to be received, assuming there is sufficient tax liability, a minimum of $2,400 in tuition and fees per eligible student must be expended. The maximum credit a taxpayer may claim for a taxable year is $1,800 multiplied by the number of students in the family who meet the enrollment criteria.

The amount a taxpayer may claim as a Hope credit is gradually reduced for higher-income taxpayers who have modified adjusted gross income between $48,000 ($96,000 for married taxpayers filing jointly) and $58,000 ($116,000 for married taxpayers filing jointly). Taxpayers with modified adjusted gross income over $58,000 ($116,000 for married taxpayers filing jointly) may not claim the Hope credit. These income phase-out amounts are for tax year 2008 and are adjusted annually for inflation.

American Opportunity Tax Credit
The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA; P.L. 111-5) temporarily replaced the Hope credit with the American Opportunity tax credit (AOTC) for the 2009 and 2010 school years. The AOTC was then extended through the end of 2012 by the Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-312). The AOTC amount is equal to a maximum of $2,500 per student annually for the first four years of college. The credit covers 100% of the first $2,000 of tuition, fees, and course materials expenses, plus 25% of the next $2,000 of tuition, fees, and course materials expenses.4 The maximum credit a taxpayer may claim is $2,500 multiplied by the number of qualified students in the family. Expanding eligibility to beyond the first two years of college may assist some households that have students closer to graduation and that have been impacted by the recent economic downturn.

The AOTC credit is gradually reduced for taxpayers who have modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) between $80,000 ($160,000 for married taxpayers filing jointly) and $90,000 ($180,000 for married taxpayers filing jointly). Taxpayers with MAGI over $90,000 ($180,000 for married taxpayers filing jointly) are ineligible for the credit. These income limits are almost double those for the Hope credit, which leads the AOTC to provide more assistance to middle- and upper-middle-income taxpayers.

The AOTC is partially refundable, which allows lower-income households with little or no tax liability to take advantage of the credit. Refundability is limited to 40% of the credit amount for which a taxpayer is eligible. Since the maximum per-student credit amount is $2,500, the maximum per-student credit refund is $1,000. A taxpayer whose tax liability is less than the refundable portion of the credit will receive a refund check from the Treasury for the difference. For example, a taxpayer with a $500 tax liability and $750 in refundable AOTCs will receive a refund check equal to $250 ($750 minus $500). In contrast, if the tax credit were nonrefundable the same taxpayer would have their tax liability reduced to zero, but receive no refund check.

 

Lifetime Learning Tax Credit

 

The Lifetime Learning credit may be claimed for the qualified tuition and related expenses of the students in a taxpayer's family who are enrolled at eligible institutions. The credit amount is equal to 20% of the taxpayer's first $10,000 of out-of-pocket qualified tuition and related expenses. The maximum credit a taxpayer may claim is $2,000 and is not indexed for inflation. If a taxpayer is claiming a Hope credit (or AOTC) for a particular student, none of that student's expenses may be applied to the Lifetime Learning credit. Taxpayers cannot claim the credit if they are claimed as a dependent by another taxpayer, or if they are married and filing separate tax returns.

The amount a taxpayer may claim as a Lifetime Learning credit is gradually reduced as income increases. For the 2010 tax year, the credit is reduced for taxpayers who have modified adjusted gross income between $50,000 ($100,000 for married taxpayers filing jointly) and $60,000 ($120,000 for married taxpayers filing jointly). Taxpayers with modified adjusted gross income over $60,000 ($120,000 for married taxpayers filing jointly) may not claim the Lifetime Learning credit. The income phase-out amounts are adjusted annually for inflation.

 

Tuition and Fees Deduction

 

As part of the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (EGTRRA, P.L. 10716), a new "above-the-line" deduction was created for post-secondary education expenses paid by taxpayers for themselves, their spouses, or dependents, starting in 2002. An above-the-line deduction is subtracted from taxable income before other deductions or exemptions are claimed and lowers adjusted gross income. One of the benefits of this above-the-line deduction is that it reduces the taxpayer's adjusted gross income (AGI).5 Deductions that reduce AGI will often provide a greater tax benefit, because as AGI increases, it can cause other tax deductions and credits to be reduced or eliminated.

The tuition and fees deduction is a temporary provision. After its original enactment in 2001, the provision expired in 2005 and was retroactively extended through 2007 by the Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006 (P.L. 109-432). The deduction was extended through the end of 2009 by Division C of P.L. 110-343, the Tax Extenders and Alternative Minimum Relief Act of 2008. Most recently, the Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-312) extended the deduction through 2011.

The tuition and fees deduction was limited to $3,000 for 2002 and 2003 and then rose to $4,000 for 2004 and thereafter. It is generally available to taxpayers with adjusted gross incomes below $80,000 ($160,000 for married individuals filing jointly). If adjusted gross income is more than $80,000 ($160,000 for married individuals filing jointly), the deduction cannot be claimed.

Only certain higher education expenses are allowable. For example, tuition and fees required for enrollment or attendance at an eligible postsecondary educational institution are allowable. However, taxpayers must subtract any scholarships, educational assistance allowances, or other nontaxable sources of income spent for educational purposes from the tuition and fees expense.

This reduced amount is the qualified amount eligible for the deduction. Personal expenses and the cost of books are not allowable. Taxpayers cannot claim a course involving sports, games, or hobbies, unless such course is part of the student's degree program.

The income tax code disallows education expenses claimed for certain tax incentive programs to be claimed for the deduction as well. Any qualified education expenses deducted as a business expense, claimed for an education tax credit, or paid with earnings from either a Coverdell education savings account or U.S. education savings bonds, cannot be claimed for the tuition and fees deduction.

Additionally, the use of the deduction is conditional on the tax status of the student in relationship to the taxpayer. If the taxpayer claims an exemption for a dependent who is an eligible student, the taxpayer can include expenses paid for the student in determining the deduction. If the dependent pays the qualified expenses and the taxpayer claims an exemption for that student, neither the taxpayer nor the dependent can deduct the expenses.

 

Business Expense Deduction of Work-Related Education

 

An individual taxpayer is allowed to deduct education expenditures as a business expense if the education (1) maintains or improves a skill in the taxpayer's present work and (2) is required by the taxpayer's employer to maintain salary, status, or job. Even if one of the two tests is met, there are limits to the determination of qualifying work-related education. Such education is not qualified if it is needed to meet the minimum educational requirements of the taxpayer's present business, or if it is part of a program of study that would qualify the taxpayer for a new trade or business.

An example of qualifying work-related education is the course work that teachers or accountants are required to take to maintain their license. As long as these courses do not qualify the taxpayer for a new trade or business, they are eligible for the deduction. For teachers and accountants, though, this example applies only if they have already met the minimum requirements for their profession. If course work is being taken to become eligible to teach, it would not qualify under this provision.

Deductible expenses include tuition, books, supplies, lab fees, and similar items; certain transportation and travel costs; and other education expenses, such as costs of research and typing. Taxpayers may not deduct personal or capital expenses. The same deductible expenses may not be used to claim the tuition and fees deduction. Expenses may not be claimed if they were paid with tax-free scholarship, grant, or employer-provided educational assistance funds.

The business expense deduction for work-related education expenses is included as a miscellaneous itemized deduction. Miscellaneous itemized deductions are allowed only to the extent that their total exceeds 2% of the taxpayer's adjusted gross income.

 

Exclusion of Scholarship and Fellowship Income

 

A scholarship or fellowship is tax free if the recipient is a candidate for a degree at a college or other educational institution and it is used to pay qualified education expenses.6 Students are considered candidates as long as they are pursuing a degree at a college or university, or they are attending an accredited college or other accredited educational institution that is authorized to provide a program for a bachelor's degree or a higher degree. Qualified education expenses include tuition, fees, books, supplies, and equipment that are required for the courses at the eligible educational institution. If all criteria discussed above are met, taxpayers simply disregard scholarships and fellowships received when totaling their income for tax purposes.

Students must generally pay taxes on any part of a scholarship, fellowship, or tuition reduction that can be attributed to teaching, research. or other services that have been performed, are being performed, or will be performed. In effect, that income is considered payment for work. A temporary exception to this general rule was allowed for the National Health Service Corps Scholarship Program and the F. Edward Hebert Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship and Financial Assistance Program by EGTRRA (P.L. 107-16). This exception was recently extended through 2012 by the Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-312). In addition to being tax free, a scholarship or fellowship may not be used for room, board, transportation, clerical help, or equipment and other expenses that are not required for enrollment in or attendance at an eligible educational institution.

The numerous types of scholarships, fellowships, and awards with scholarship and fellowship characteristics make it complicated for taxpayers to determine the tax treatment of a specific award. Athletic scholarships are tax free only if they meet the requirements for tax-free status mentioned previously. Fulbright grants may be taxable depending upon the type of grant being made. If the grant is paid for lecturing or teaching, it is taxable because the recipient is being paid for services. Pell Grants are tax free as long as the money is used for qualifying tuition and course-related expenses during the grant period. Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants and Grants to State for State Student Incentives are tax free as long as the money is used for qualifying tuition and course-related expenses during the grant period. Veterans' benefits are tax free in accordance with the normal tax-free status accorded any payments for education, training, or subsistence by the Department of Veterans Affairs. Cash scholarship prizes won in contests are not considered scholarships, unless the terms of the award specify that the money must be used for educational purposes. If the scholarship prize says that the money can only be used if the recipient is a degree candidate at a college and only for qualified expenses, it is a tax-free scholarship.

 

Exclusion of Tuition Reduction

 

If a taxpayer receives a tuition reduction, it is tax free as long as it meets certain requirements. The requirements depend upon the level of education being sought. Below the graduate school level, the tuition reduction is tax free if the educational institution gives the reduction to its employees, or retirees, for their own education or that of their spouse or children. This benefit is applicable at primary and secondary schools as well. At the graduate level, a tuition reduction is tax free if it is given by an educational institution to a graduate student who teaches or does research for that college or university and the reduction is not given as payment for services rendered (e.g., the student receives a stipend for these services).

 

Exclusion of Employer-Provided Educational Assistance

 

Individuals may receive up to $5,250 each year in educational assistance from their employer tax free. Employer-provided education assistance is tax free only if the assistance is provided in association with an educational assistance program. Section 127(b) of the IRC defines an educational assistance program as a separate written plan of an employer for the exclusive benefit of its employees to provide such employees with educational assistance. Educational assistance covers payments for tuition, fees, books, supplies, and equipment. The courses can be graduate or undergraduate courses and they do not have to be related to the job. Educational assistance does not include the following expenses, even if they are related to course work: meals, lodging, transportation, tools or supplies other than books that are kept after completing the course. Employees of educational institutions may exclude tuition benefits they receive, either for their own education or for the education of a member of their family.

Administratively, employers do not include these benefits when reporting compensation to the IRS. Similarly, taxpayers simply disregard educational benefits received when totaling their income for tax purposes. Employers who pay more than $5,250 in educational benefits during a year must include the excess amount when reporting wages to the IRS. Taxpayers must pay tax on the amount of benefits exceeding the $5,250 threshold. The $5,250 limit has been in place since 1986. For employees of multiple employers with qualified educational assistance programs, the $5,250 limit applies to the value of the benefit received from all employers.

The exclusion for employer-provided educational assistance is a temporary provision. The exclusion was first made available for five years by the Revenue Act of 1978 (P.L. 95-600). The Tax Reform Act of 1986 (P.L. 99-514) increased the exclusion limit from $5,000 to $5,250. The exclusion was extended several times again in the late 1980s and through the 1990s. In 2001, EGTRRA (P.L. 107-16) extended the exclusion through 2010 and temporarily included assistance for graduate expenses. The Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-312) extended the exclusion for employer-provided undergraduate and graduate assistance through 2012.

 

Parental Personal Exemption for Dependent Students Age 19-23

 

A taxpayer is allowed one exemption for each person claimed as a dependent. The exemption amount is $3,650 in 2010. To claim the exemption for a dependent five tests must be met. One of these tests, the gross income test, which requires that a dependent not have earned income in excess of $3,650, does not apply if the person is the child of the taxpayer and is either: under age 19 at the end of the year, or a student under age 24 at the end of the year. To qualify, the child must be a full-time student at a qualified educational institution or taking full-time, on-farm training courses which are given by either a qualified educational institution, or a state, county, or local government. The student has to have been enrolled during some part of each of five calendar months, though not necessarily consecutive months, in the calendar year. The student must meet the other tests for dependency.7 If the exemption for the student is claimed by the parent, that student cannot claim the personal exemption on his or her own tax return.

Student Loans

Taxpayers may deduct interest paid on qualified student loans. Qualified student loans are indebtedness incurred solely to pay qualified higher education expenses. The primary federal student loan program is the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan (DL) program. Until July 1, 2010, federal student loans were also available through the Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL) program.8 In addition to federally provided student loans, there are many privately provided sources of education loans as well.

 

Student Loan Interest Deduction

 

Student loan interest became deductible in 1998. The interest paid is an "above-the-line" deduction, which means that it is subtracted from taxpayer income before deductions or exemptions are claimed and lowers adjusted gross income. Student loan interest is interest paid during the tax year on a loan taken out to pay qualified higher education expenses which include tuition and fees, room and board, books, supplies and equipment, and other necessary expenses such as transportation. Taxpayers can deduct interest that they are required to pay as well as any interest payments made voluntarily. Taxpayers cannot take the deduction if they are claimed as a dependent by another taxpayer, or if they are married and filing separate tax returns.

A maximum of $2,500 in paid student loan interest can be deducted annually. For 2010, the deduction amount is phased out if modified adjusted gross income is between $60,000 and $75,000 ($120,000 and $150,000 for joint filers). The student loan interest deduction cannot be claimed if modified adjusted gross income is $75,000 or more ($150,000 or more for joint filers). These income limits reflect temporary changes made in 2001 by EGTRRA (P.L. 107-16). Prior to 2001, the deduction could not be claimed if modified adjusted gross income was $55,000 or more ($75,000 or more for joint filers). In addition, prior to 2001, interest could not be deducted after the first 60 months of repayment. The changes to the student loan interest deduction made by EGTRRA (P.L. 107-16) were scheduled to expire at the end of 2010. The Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-312), however, extended the changes through 2012.

Before claiming the student loan interest deduction, taxpayers must reduce their qualified higher educational assistance benefits by any payments made from the following tax free items: employer provided educational assistance benefits; tax-free withdrawals from a Coverdell Education Savings Account (formerly known as an education IRA); tax-free withdrawals from a qualified tuition program; U.S. Savings Bond interest that is excluded from income because it was used to pay qualified higher education expenses; certain scholarships; veteran's educational assistance benefits; or any other nontaxable payments received for educational expenses.

 

Student Loan Forgiveness

 

Generally when taxpayers are responsible for making loan payments and the loan is canceled, also referred to as forgiven, the amount of the loan is to be included in the taxpayer's gross income for tax purposes. To qualify for tax-free treatment, a canceled loan must contain a provision that all or part of the debt will be canceled if the taxpayer works for a certain period of time, in a certain profession, and for any of a broad class of employers. The loan must have been made by a qualified lender to assist the borrower in attending a qualified educational institution.9

Incentives to Save for College Expenses

Unlike education tax credits and deductions, which are used when taxpayers are currently spending money on education for themselves, their spouse, or their dependents, education savings plans are generally used to build up college savings on a tax-free basis over a number of years. There are five types of tax incentives to promote taxpayer saving for college expenses: (1) Qualified Tuition Programs (QTPs), or Section 529 plans, (2) Coverdell Education Savings Accounts, (3) Treasury Bonds, (4) allowing early withdrawals from individual retirement accounts (IRAs), and (5) the Uniform Transfers to Minors Act.

 

Qualified Tuition Programs (QTPs)

 

Generally, QTPs fall into two types of categories: (1) prepaid plans, and (2) savings plans. Prepaid tuition plans allow individuals to purchase tuition years in advance of attendance at a discounted present day price. Savings plans offer market-based returns based upon the type of investment selected by the plan owner. In both categories of plans, taxpayers contribute after-tax dollars, which are then allowed to grow on a tax-deferred basis. If funds are withdrawn to pay eligible higher education expenses, then no income tax will be due. If funds are withdrawn for other purposes, then the earnings are considered taxable income to the distributee. There are no income limits for those who contribute to the account and there are no limits on the annual amount that can be contributed. The tax-preferred treatment of QTPs was originally scheduled to expire on December 31, 2010 and withdrawals made after January 1, 2011 would not have qualified for this tax-free treatment. A provision included in the Pension Protection Act of 2006 (P.L. 109-280) permanently extended the tax-preferred treatment of QTPs.10

The qualified higher education expenses incurred by the beneficiary of a QTP must be reduced before the tax-free portion of the distribution can be determined. Qualified expenses must be reduced by all tax-free educational assistance, including scholarships and fellowships, veterans' educational assistance, Pell grants, and employer-provided educational assistance. Distributions from a QTP and a Coverdell cannot be allocated to the same qualified expenses and those expenses used for the QTPs cannot be used to claim any of the education credits (mentioned above).

 

Coverdell Education Savings Accounts (ESAs)

 

Coverdell Education Savings Accounts (ESAs) are tax-preferred savings accounts originally created for the purpose of paying for college. Parents can contribute a maximum of $2,000 per child (under age 18) annually. Contributions to Coverdell accounts are not tax deductible; however, the earnings on the account are tax free as long as the funds are used for qualified education expenses. Qualified education expenses include college tuition and fees, required books, supplies and equipment, and qualified expenses for room and board. Qualified education expenses also include those paid for a child's primary and secondary education.

The $2,000 per-child contribution limit and the ability to use Coverdell accounts to pay for a child's primary and secondary education are set to expire at the end of 2012. Prior to 2001, the per-child contribution limit was $500 and the accounts could only be used to pay for higher education expenses. EGTRRA (P.L. 107-16) changed this for the 2002 to 2010 school years. The Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010 (P.L. 111312) recently extended these changes through 2012.

Taxpayers can open a Coverdell account at any bank in the U.S., or at any other entity that has been approved by the IRS. There is no limit on the number of Coverdell accounts that can be established for any given child -- as long as the total combined contributions do not exceed the maximum contribution amount each year. The $2,000 contribution limit is reduced if the taxpayer's adjusted gross income (AGI) is between $95,000 and $110,000 (between $190,000 and $220,000 if married, filing a joint return). Contributions can be made up until April 15th of the next year, rather than December 31st of the taxable year. A 6% excise tax is levied each year on excess contributions (over $2,000) that are made to a Coverdell account.

The tax-free distribution amount from a Coverdell account cannot include higher education expenses paid for by tax-free educational assistance or expenses claimed for the Hope or Lifetime Learning credits. If a designated beneficiary receives distributions from both a Coverdell and a QTP in the same year, and the total distribution is more than the beneficiary's qualified higher education expenses, the excess distribution will be taxable.

 

Education Savings Bond Program

 

In general, taxpayers must pay tax on the interest earned on U.S. Savings Bonds. If the interest is not reported in the year it is earned, it must be reported in the year the bond is redeemed. For higher education purposes, taxpayers may be able to redeem qualified U.S. Savings Bond without having to include in income some or all of the interest earned on the bonds. Taxpayers are eligible if they have used bond proceeds to pay qualified higher education expenses for themselves, their spouse or a dependent for whom they claim an exemption on their tax return.

The exclusion is subject to a phase-out in the years in which the bonds are cashed. In 2010, the phase-out range begins at $70,100 for single taxpayers ($105,100 for married taxpayers filing jointly) and ends at $85,100 for single taxpayers ($135,100 for married taxpayers filing jointly). The threshold amounts are inflation adjusted and may change in future tax years.

Qualified U.S. savings bonds are any series EE bond issued after 1989 or a series I bond. The owner must be at least 24 years old before the bond's issue date. The bond must be issued in either the name of the taxpayer, as sole owner, or in the name of both the taxpayer and the spouse, as co-owners. Qualified higher education expenses are tuition and required enrollment fees, contributions to a qualified tuition program, or contributions to a Coverdell ESA. Qualified higher education expenses must first be reduced by any and all of the following tax-free benefits: tax-free scholarships; expenses used to compute the tax-free portion of withdrawals from a Coverdell ESA; expenses used to compute the tax-free portion of distributions from a qualified tuition plan; any nontaxable payments received for educational expenses like employer-provided educational assistance or tuition reductions; and any expenses used in figuring the Hope and Lifetime Learning credits.

 

Early Withdrawals from Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs)

 

Generally, if taxpayers make withdrawals from their IRA before they reach the age of 59 1/2, they must pay a penalty of 10% on the early withdrawal. This applies to any type of IRA, traditional, SEP-IRA, SIMPLE or ROTH. When the withdrawal is made for qualified higher education expenses, the taxpayer does not incur the 10% tax on early withdrawal. The withdrawn amount is, however, considered income and is subject to tax.

To benefit from this incentive, taxpayers must use the proceeds to pay qualified higher education expenses for themselves, their spouse, or their children or grandchildren. Qualified higher education expenses include tuition and required enrollment fees, books, supplies, equipment, and room and board if the student is attending school at least half-time. There are no income limits or phase outs, nor are there limits on the amounts withdrawn from the IRA. Qualified higher education expenses must first be reduced by any expenses paid with the following funds: tax-free withdrawals from a Coverdell ESA; tax-free scholarships; employer provided educational assistance; or any tax-free payment (other than a gift, bequest, or devise) due to enrollment at an eligible institution.

 

Uniform Transfers to Minors

 

Generally, gifts of up to $12,00011 made by a donor during the calendar year to any donee are not included in the total amount of the donor's taxable gifts that year. This annual exclusion is available to all donors. Money given from one individual to another in excess of $12,000 during a year is typically subject to a gift tax which is imposed at graduated tax rates ranging from 18% to 45%.

In addition to this annual exclusion, an unlimited gift tax exclusion is allowed for amounts paid by a donor directly to an educational institution for tuition payments on behalf of the donee. Amounts paid for books, dormitory fees, or room and board are not eligible for the exclusion. The gift tax exclusion applies for any amount paid not only by a student's parents but also by other family members or any other individual, not necessarily related.

Beneficiaries of Education Tax Incentives

As indicated in the introduction, the beneficiaries of education tax benefits vary by type of taxpayer. Taxpayers differ by income, marital status, and number of dependents and, as a result, the same education tax incentive can affect taxpayers differently. This section presents IRS data on the utilization of the various tax benefits. Data presented here are from 2006. Although more recent data are available, the distribution of claimed tax benefits is relatively stable over time.

 

An Economic Perspective

 

One way to evaluate education tax benefits for higher education is from the economic perspectives of efficiency, equity, and simplicity. Education tax benefits provide subsidies to encourage more investment in education than would otherwise be undertaken. Tax subsidies for education can enhance economic efficiency if they are successful in increasing investment in education. However, education tax incentives may not be effective if they subsidize activities that would have been undertaken in the absence of the tax incentive, i.e. subsidize enrollment that would have occurred anyway, or fail to increase enrollment at all. Education tax incentives can, however, be beneficial in making college costs more affordable.

As mentioned previously, vertical equity is a concept suggesting that tax burdens be distributed fairly among people with different abilities to pay. Education tax incentives benefit those who have sufficient income to pay tax. Those individuals without sufficient income to pay tax do not have the opportunity to benefit from education tax provisions. The disproportionate benefit of tax expenditures to individuals with higher incomes reduces the progressivity of the tax system, which is often viewed as a reduction in equity.

The tax credits are regressive in that the more income taxpayers have, the more benefits they receive (up to the maximum phase out limits of the tax provision). As a result of the fact that the provisions are not based on need, education tax benefits move the distributional balance of federal aid away from low-income students towards middle- and upper-income students.

Higher income households are more able, and more likely, to benefit from education provisions, which some view as detracting from equity in the tax code. Yet, the incentives provide needed relief for the middle class, many of whom may not qualify for any other source of financial aid. Education tax benefits add complexity and cost to the administration of income taxes, both for individuals and the federal government, but may offer a less-complicated alternative to traditional financial aid. A closer examination of that issue is provided later in this report.

 

A Comparison of Households

 

Some families have income levels so low that they do not have tax liability, or even have a negative tax liability. In these cases, families would not be able to benefit from certain education tax incentives. For example, in 2007, a married couple with two dependent children under the age of 17 and one dependent child, attending college, after taking into account standard deductions, personal exemptions, child tax credits, and the earned income tax credit, does not begin to experience positive tax liability until their income exceeds $46,250. A single individual in 2007, who is the head of household, with two dependent children, must have income in excess of $31,128 in order to experience positive income tax liability.12 Families with these income levels or below may not be able to receive tax benefits from any education tax incentive programs.

Besides having low income, there are two other factors that may contribute to lower income families' inability to participate in education tax incentive programs. Lower income families may receive larger amounts of need-based aid, like Pell Grants, that cannot be claimed in conjunction with education tax benefits and lower income families typically spend less on education than other households.

The number of households who may be unable to participate in education tax incentive programs (those with income below $30,000) can be approximated by using income tax data.13 As shown in Table 1, a total of 138,394,754 returns were filed in 2006, and of that number a total of 67,407,107 income tax returns were filed with reported adjusted gross income of $30,000 or less, representing 48.7% of all income tax returns filed for the year.

                  Table 1. By Adjusted Gross Income,

 

                   Income Tax Returns Filed in 2006

 

 _____________________________________________________________________

 

 

                               Total Number of      % of Total Returns

 

 Adjusted Gross Income           Returns Filed                   Filed

 

 _____________________________________________________________________

 

 

 $10,000  and under                 26,095,711                   18.8%

 

 $10,001 to $20,000                 22,649,374                   16.4%

 

 $20,001 to $30,000                 18,662,022                   13.5%

 

 $30,001 to $50,000                 24,839,017                   17.9%

 

 $50,001 to $75,000                 18,854,917                   13.6%

 

 $75,001 to $100,000                11,140,408                    8.0%

 

 $100,001 to $200,000               12,088,423                    8.7%

 

 $200,000 and above                  4,064,884                    2.9%

 

 

 Total                             138,394,754

 

 _____________________________________________________________________

 

 

 Source: CRS table created using data obtained from IRS

 

 Statistics of Income, http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-soi/

 

 visited Oct. 16, 2008.

 

 

 Note: Amounts may not add up due to rounding.

 

Who Benefits From Education-Related Tax Exclusions?

 

Congress created tax-advantaged education savings plans out of concern that families face increasing difficulty in paying for college. The plans also reflect an intention to subsidize the education costs of families that might not qualify for need-based federal student aid. Tax provisions can be justified as a means of encouraging families to use their own resources for educational purposes and as a means of easing their education financing burdens.14

Exclusions reduce a taxpayer's tax liability, but only by a percentage of the amount deducted. Education tax exclusions include scholarship and fellowship income and the earnings from Coverdell ESAs, QTPs, government bonds, and IRAs.

The allowance of exclusions (and deductions) diminishes the progressivity of the federal income tax system because the value of income tax exclusions increases with marginal tax rates (and income). That is to say, the taxable income of an individual in the 10% tax bracket (the lowest federal income tax rate) would be reduced $10 for each $100 of itemized deductions. In contrast, the taxable income of an individual in the 35% tax bracket (the highest federal tax bracket) would be reduced $35 for each $100 deduction.15

While there are no specific data to show the income levels of participants in tax-preferred education savings programs, Susan Dynarski found that the advantages of saving for college, in particular the use of QTPs and Coverdell ESAs, rose sharply with income.16 The three reasons she cited are that,

 

First, those with the highest marginal tax rates benefit most from sheltering income, gaining most in both absolute and relative terms. Second, the accounts are risky for families for whom college attendance of children is uncertain, since account holders are penalized if the accounts are not used for schooling. [However] the current penalty structure leaves most benefits intact for the upper [income] brackets. . . . Third, finally, the college financial aid system reduces aid for those families that have any financial assets, including an ESA or 529[QTPs]. Since the highest-income families are unaffected by this [financial] aid tax, this further intensifies the positive correlation between income and the advantages of the tax-advantaged college savings accounts.17

 

Higher income taxpayers may participate more in savings programs than lower income taxpayers because the after-tax return on savings is greater for high income taxpayers. Given an interest rate, r, the after-tax return would be (1-t)*r, where t is the tax rate. If a household chose to move savings into tax-preferred education incentives, regardless of the interest rate, the benefits would be greater for households facing higher marginal tax rates. For instance, a household facing a 25% marginal tax rate would experience an increase in its after-tax return on savings of 33% (from (1-.25)*r to r) while a household with lower income, in the 15% bracket, would experience an after-tax return on savings increase of only 18% (from (1-.15)*r to r), almost 50% less than the higher income household.

 

Who Benefits From Education-Related Tax Deductions?

 

Taxpayers may either itemize their deductible expenses or claim the standard deduction. For 2008, the standard deduction amounts are $10,900 for a married couple filing jointly, $8,000 for heads of household, and $5,450 for single individuals. Taxpayers will need to have itemized deductions that exceed the amount of their standard deduction to make itemizing deductions worthwhile. Nationally, the percentage of taxpayers who itemize was 35.4% for 2006 and 2005, up from 34.9% in 2004.18 Lower income taxpayers generally do not itemize and use the standard deduction amount instead.

The tuition and fees deduction and the deduction for student loan interest, which are "above-the-line" deductions, are available to taxpayers regardless of whether they claim the standard deduction or itemize deductions when filing their income tax return. As a result, these two incentives are more available to modest income people than the business expense deduction for work-related education, which can only be claimed by those who itemize deductions. The benefits of this business expense deduction would most likely flow to higher income taxpayers who are more likely to itemize.

As mentioned previously, a deduction can be worth different amounts to different taxpayers depending on their marginal tax bracket. The higher the marginal tax rate, the more beneficial the deduction can be.

Income tax data from 2006 indicated that the student loan interest deduction incentive primarily benefitted middle and upper-middle income groups. As shown in Table 2 below, taxpayers with adjusted gross income (AGI) between $30,001 and $50,000 claimed the most deductions (25.6%) and the largest deduction amount (26.7%) even thought they represented only 17.9% of the number of returns filed. The AGI group with the next largest participation was a higher income group, with AGI between $50,001 and $75,000. While this group represented 13.6% of taxpayers, they claimed 21.9% of deductions and 21.3% of the deduction amount.

          Table 2. By Adjusted Gross Income, the Number and Amount of

 

                Student Loan Interest Deductions Claimed in 2006

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

                                                          Amount of

 

                                      Total  % of Total     Student

 

                                    Returns     Returns        Loan  % of Total

 

                                   Claiming    Claiming    Interest   Amount of

 

                 Total              Student     Student   Deduction     Student

 

 Adjusted    Number of     % of        Loan        Loan     Claimed        Loan

 

    Gross      Returns    Total    Interest    Interest         ($     Interest

 

   Income        Filed  Returns  Deductions  Deductions  thousands)   Deduction

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 $10,000 and

 

  under     26,095,711    18.9%     454,346        5.3%     291,868        4.7%

 

 

 $10,001 to

 

  $20,000   22,649,374    16.4%     737,561        8.6%     468,459        7.6%

 

 

 $20,001 to

 

  $30,000   18,662,022    13.5%   1,158,115       13.6%     786,511       12.8%

 

 

 $30,001 to

 

  $50,000   24,839,017    17.9%   2,183,428       25.6%   1,643,456       26.7%

 

 

 $50,001 to

 

  $75,000   18,854,917    13.6%   1,873,978       21.9%   1,310,876       21.3%

 

 

 $75,001 to

 

  $100,000  11,140,408     8.0%   1,247,055       14.6%   1,104,494       17.9%

 

 

 $100,001 to

 

  $200,000  12,088,423     8.7%     886,415       10.4%     551,200        9.0%

 

 

 Total     134,329,872            8,540,898               6,156,864

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 Source: CRS table created using data obtained from IRS Statistics of

 

 Income, http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-soi/

 

 

 Note: Amounts may not add up due to rounding.

 

Who Benefits From Education Tax Credits?

 

In contrast to deductions and exemptions, tax credits are subtracted from tax liability rather than from taxable income. The value of tax credits is independent of the taxpayer's marginal tax rate and reduces tax liability by the amount of the credit. For example, a $100 credit reduces tax liability by $100 while a $100 deduction reduces taxable income by a portion of the deduction amount, dependent on the individual's marginal tax rate (e.g., at a rate of 33%, a $100 deduction reduces taxable income by $33). As enacted in recent legislation, the only taxpayers who can benefit from education tax credits are those with positive tax liability.

An examination of education tax credit data from 2006 found that middle and upper-middle income households benefitted the most from education credits. As shown in Table 3, households with adjusted gross income (AGI) of $30,001 or more filed 65.6% of the tax returns claiming education credits and 75.1% of the credit amount, even though these households comprise only 49.8% of tax filers. Taxpayers with incomes of $20,000 and below filed 16.6% of returns claiming education tax credits and 8.6% of the credit amount, while comprising 34.4% of tax filers.

            Table 3. By Adjusted Gross Income, Number and Amount of

 

                     Education Tax Credits Claimed in 2006

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

                                                 Percent   Amount of

 

                                        Total   of Total   Education    Percent

 

                   Total              Returns    Returns      Credit   of Total

 

 Adjusted      Number of   Percent   Claiming   Claiming     Claimed  Amount of

 

    Gross        Returns  of Total  Education  Education   ($ in the  Education

 

   Income          Filed   Returns    Credits    Credits  thousands)    Credits

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 $10,000 and

 

  under       26,095,711     18.9%     87,074       1.1%       8,573       0.1%

 

 

 $10,001 to

 

  $20,000     22,649,374     16.4%  1,193,195      15.4%     598,047       8.5%

 

 

 $20,001 to

 

  $30,000     18,662,022     13.5%  1,377,898      17.8%   1,145,192      16.3%

 

 

 $30,001 to

 

  $50,000     24,839,017     17.9%  2,070,835      26.8%   1,967,379      28.0%

 

 

 $50,001 to

 

  $75,000     18,854,917     13.6%  1,570,901      20.3%   1,705,504      24.3%

 

 

 $75,001 to

 

  $100,000    11,140,408      8.0%  1,274,749      16.5%   1,526,097      21.7%

 

 

 $100,001 to

 

  $200,000    12,088,423      8.7%    150,487       1.9%      71,628       1.0%

 

 

 Total       134,329,872            7,725,138              7,022,420

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 Source: CRS table created using data obtained from IRS Statistics of

 

 Income, http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-soi/

 

 

 Note: Amounts may not add up due to rounding.

 

 

According to some, the choice between deductions and credits should depend in part on the purpose of the exclusion.19

 

If the motivation is to correct for the fact that a given expenditure reduces ability to pay, a deduction is appropriate. If the purpose is mainly to encourage certain behavior, it is not at all clear whether credits or deductions are superior. A credit reduces the effective price of the favored good by the same percentage for all individuals; a deduction decreases the price by different percentages for different people.

 

In part, the appropriate choice to subsidize education depends on the taxpayer's response to the incentive. This is, primarily, determined by their elasticity of demand. If taxpayers have an inelastic demand for education, they are insensitive to price and subsidies will not affect their behavior. If, on the other hand, taxpayers are sensitive to price, tax subsides may alter their education demand.

Studies of tuition price changes and enrollment response can provide some insight into expected changes in enrollment due to the price reduction that education tax benefits provide. If students and their families are sensitive to tuition price changes, the net reduction in price caused by tax benefits would positively affect enrollment. If students are relatively insensitive to price changes, the net price reduction caused by tax credits would have little impact on enrollment. Typically, students from higher income families have the resources to finance college enrollment without federal subsidies and are relatively insensitive to price changes.

 

Simplicity

 

One view of education tax incentives is that they are easier to administer relative to traditional financial aid. For families, the traditional financial aid process involves the completion of a free application for federal student aid (FAFSA), which is submitted to the U.S. Department of Education (ED). In order to complete the application, the household's income tax return must be completed for the most recent tax year. ED processes the application and sends the family a student aid report (SAR). The higher education institution receives the financial aid information from ED and uses their own methodology to determine family contribution and financial need. That determination is then communicated to the family.

The traditional financial aid process involves the taxpayer, the U.S. Department of Education, and the university's financial aid officers, while education tax incentives primarily20 involve the taxpayer and the U.S. Department of Treasury. To receive education tax benefits, the family files an income tax return, which is processed by one agency. To receive traditional financial aid, the family files a FAFSA form, which is processed by two agencies. Both forms can involve detailed calculations and multitudes of records that have to be made and kept by the taxpayer and verified and assessed by the government agencies.21

Unlike the education tax incentives, traditional financial aid sources are not always known or certain at the time of the student's application. While the process of completing the income tax forms may be cumbersome, the taxpayer knows their eligibility for benefits at the time of completion. As long as the taxpayer has met the eligibility criteria and has been accurate in reporting information, the tax benefit amounts are known and certain. The traditional financial aid process typically involves a degree of uncertainty about aid sources and families often have to wait months from the time of application to learn what financial aid will be made available for the student. In this respect, education tax incentives may be more advantageous than traditional financial aid.

Alternatively, education tax incentives contribute to the complexity of the tax code and raise the cost of administering the tax system. Those costs, which can be difficult to isolate and measure, are rarely included in the cost-benefit analysis of tax provisions. The complexity of the tax code adds to taxpayers' costs, either in learning how to claim incentives and doing so, or in increased direct costs of paying tax professionals to perform the service for the taxpayer. Additionally, many taxpayers do not know which of the education tax benefits may be most effective in future years. The income phase-outs are at different levels and make calculations difficult and the tax law harder to understand.

Another distinction between financial aid and tax incentives is the timing of the receipt of the assistance. The benefits of tax incentives for education are realized at the time of income tax return filing which, for most taxpayers, typically occurs in the spring by the April 15 deadline. This is in contrast to most academic tuition and fees payments that are made at the beginning of each academic year or semester, typically occurring in the months of August or September and December or January. This lagged difference, often up to 10 or more months, in receiving the tax benefit cannot provide assistance to anyone trying to raise enough funds to pay initial college bills. In contrast, traditional financial aid is applied to the educational account of the student at the beginning of each semester. In this respect, education tax incentives may be less advantageous than traditional financial aid.

Author Contact Information

 

Mark P. Keightley

 

Analyst in Public Finance

 

mkeightley@crs.loc.gov, 7-1049

 

FOOTNOTES

 

 

1 U.S. Congress, Joint Committee on Taxation, Estimates of Federal Tax Expenditures for Fiscal Years 2010-2014, 111th Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 2010), p. 45.

2 Veterans educational and training benefits are not includible in income and are thus tax-exempt.

3 Above-the-line deductions, unlike itemized deductions, are available to all tax filers. Typically, taxpayers claiming the standard deduction cannot benefit from provisions that are itemized for deduction.

4 Course materials means books, supplies, and equipment needed for a course of study whether or not the materials are purchased from the educational institution as a condition of enrollment or attendance.

5 The deduction is available to taxpayers regardless of whether they claim the standard deduction or itemize deductions when filing their income tax return. The deduction is not restricted by the overall limitation on itemized deductions.

6 Scholarships and fellowships are very similar. They are both grants of money to help obtain an education. The money can be paid directly to the student or to the institution on the student's behalf. A scholarship is designed to help a student pursue undergraduate or graduate studies. A fellowship is designed to help a student pursue studies or some form of research. A scholarship or fellowship is tax free if the recipient is a candidate for a degree at a college or other educational institution, and if the scholarship is used to pay qualified education expenses.

7 These other tests are the member of household or relationship test, the citizen or resident test, the joint return test, and the support test.

8 For more information see CRS Report R40122, Federal Student Loans Made Under the Federal Family Education Loan Program and the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program: Terms and Conditions for Borrowers, by David P. Smole.

9 For more information regarding student loan forgiveness programs, see CRS Report RL32516, Student Loan Forgiveness Programs, by Gail McCallion.

10 For more detailed information see CRS Report RL31214, Saving for College Through Qualified Tuition (Section 529) Programs, by Linda Levine.

11 This amount is indexed for inflation.

12 See CRS Report RS22337, Federal Income Tax Thresholds for Selected Years: 1996 Through 2009, by Gary Guenther.

13 This is only an approximation because the number of taxpayers who may desire to claim education tax incentives and are unable to is not distinct from other taxpayers in the same income group who may have no interest in education tax incentives.

14 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on the Budget, Tax Expenditures: Compendium of Background Material on Individual Provisions, committee print prepared by the Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress, 107th Cong., 2nd sess., S. Prt. 107-80 (Washington: GPO, 2002), pp. 347-360.

15 The example assumes that the deduction does not drop the taxpayer into the next lower tax bracket.

16 Susan M. Dynarski, "Who Benefits from the Education Savings Incentives? Income, Educational Expectations, and the Value of the 529 and Coverdell," National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) Working Paper 10470, May 2004, p. 1.

17 Ibid.

18 As reported in the Internal Revenue Service, Individual Income Tax Returns, Preliminary Data 2004-2006.

19 Harvey Rosen, "The Personal Income Tax" in Public Finance (Boston: McGraw-Hill, 1999), pp.354-55.

20 The institution of higher education is required to send forms to both the taxpayer and the U.S. Department of Treasury verifying eligible expenses that may be used in claiming education tax benefits.

21 For more information about federal financial aid simplification issues, see CRS Report RL33266, Federal Student Aid Need Analysis System: Background, Description, and Legislative Action, by Charmaine Mercer.

 

END OF FOOTNOTES
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