Recent federal agency actions rippled across their Louisiana counterparts,
when the Internal Revenue Service declared
that a married jointly filing status could be used by those legally married in
a state or the District of Columbia regardless of residence, and the Department
of Defense the same
for National Guard benefits. Louisiana’s response was that the law would have
to be changed in regards to income tax filing to unlink status because the
Constitution forbids marriages that are not one man to one woman, and that it
would refuse to convey such benefits to same sex couples for the identical
reason.
Citizens should note that both of these federal decisions institute forms
of tax increases and/or encouragements for deficit spending, although one may
have a minor negative impact if at all. While individual income tax
circumstances vary, in aggregate an expansion of the married jointly filing
status certainly will decrease
taxes taken in the immediate future, but may increase them in the future,
this having to do with the vagaries of different rates at different,
non-equivalent individual and family income levels between this status and
filing individually.