Brendan Burgess
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Might be quite a few maintenance adjustment orders on foot of this.
It was always an anomaly and an unfair treatment of couples who parented together.
Not true. Single parents have double the costs of cohabiting parents.
How so? Do the children eat twice as much? Or require twice as much childcare? Or twice as much clothes? etc...
Twice the mortgage costs, two property taxes, twice the standing charges on all services, higher transport costs.. All due to having the necessary housing for children to live with single parents.
Not twice as much clothes but definitely more clothes..
Sorry but I don't buy that as justifying a preferential tax treatment - most of the substantial costs you just listed are general costs of living which the individuals might have regardless of whether they have kids. They'd still be paying a mortgage / rent / property taxes, still be paying for services...
Even with the credit being restricted to the one parent, between the 2 parents they still have 50% more of a personal tax credit than a married or cohabiting couple - I think that's pretty fair.
@Beingfleeced
The only change relates to tax credit. Tax bands remain the same as in 2013
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