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When Did the Blind Get a Tax Break?World War II, of courseAuthor: Daniel Engber Published: April 12, 2005 As the Friday deadline for filing federal income tax returns approaches, many Americans are poring over their IRS Form 1040s During World War II. Until the 1940s, personal exemptions from the income tax were so big that the tax burden was negligible for many Americans. But as the need for tax revenues increased during the war, the size of exemptions decreased Support for the blind had been growing. The Social Security Act of 1935 When Congress created a standard deduction to simplify filing in 1944, advocates worried that the blind would be at a disadvantage, since they could take their benefit only if they itemized their returns. Four years later, lawmakers made the benefit (which had been raised to $600) a tax exemption, available no matter how a blind person decided to file. Why were the blind singled out for a special benefit? For one thing, blindness can be measured with relative ease. Federal guidelines are quite explicit: If you can't see better than 20/200, or if your field of vision is less than 20 degrees, you can take the credit The special exemption for the blind has led to some resentment from people with other disabilities. In the 1970s, Hawaii Sen. Daniel Inouye made several unsuccessful attempts to introduce a special exemption for the deaf. In the mid-'80s, the Reagan tax reforms eliminated the special exemption for the blind and replaced it with a smaller deduction. This year, a single filer can add an extra $1,200 to their standard deduction for being blind or elderly, while a married filer can add $950. According to estimates from the Tax Policy Center Next question? Explainer thanks Joseph Thorndike of the Tax History Project, Paul Caron of the University of Cincinnati, and Melanie Brunson of the American Council of the Blind. Thanks also to reader Tom Wanie for asking the question. Daniel Engber is a writer in New York City. |



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