Current:Home > ContactWhose name goes first on a joint tax return? Here's what the answer says about your marriage. -Wealth Empowerment Zone
Whose name goes first on a joint tax return? Here's what the answer says about your marriage.
View
Date:2025-04-17 05:45:42
When you and your spouse do your taxes every year, whose name goes first? A couple's answer to this question can say a great deal about their beliefs and attitudes, concludes a recent paper from researchers at the University of Michigan and the U.S. Treasury Department.
While American gender roles have shifted a great deal in the last 30 years, the joint tax return remains a bulwark of traditionalism, according to the first-of-its kind study. On joint tax returns filed in 2020 by heterosexual couples, men are listed before women a whopping 88% of the time, found the paper, which examined a random sample of joint tax returns filed every year between 1996 and 2020.
That's a far stronger male showing than would be expected if couples simply listed the higher earner first, noted Joel Slemrod, an economics professor at the University of Michigan and one of the paper's authors.
In fact, same-sex married couples listed the older and richer partner first much more consistently than straight couples did, indicating that traditional gender expectations may be outweighing the role of money in some cases, Slemrod said.
"There's a very, very high correlation between the fraction of returns when the man's name goes first and self-professed political attitudes," Slemrod said.
Name order varied greatly among states, with the man's name coming first 90% of the time in Iowa and 79% of the time in Washington, D.C. By cross-checking the filers' addresses with political attitudes in their home states, the researchers determined that listing the man first on a return was a strong indication that a couple held fairly conservative social and political beliefs.
They found that man-first filers had a 61% chance of calling themselves highly religious; a 65% chance of being politically conservative; a 70% chance of being Christian; and a 73% chance of opposing abortion.
"In some couples, I guess they think the man should go first in everything, and putting the man's name first is one example," Slemrod said.
Listing the man first was also associated with riskier financial behavior, in line with a body of research that shows men are generally more likely to take risks than women. Man-first returns were more likely to hold stocks, rather than bonds or simple bank accounts, and they were also more likely to engage in tax evasion, which the researchers determined by matching returns with random IRS audits.
To be sure, there is some indication that tax filers are slowly shifting their ways. Among married couples who started filing jointly in 2020, nearly 1 in 4 listed the woman's name first. But longtime joint filers are unlikely to flip their names for the sake of equality — because the IRS discourages it. The agency warns, in its instructions for a joint tax return, that taxpayers who list names in a different order than the prior year could have their processing delayed.
"That kind of cements the name order," Slemrod said, "so any gender norms we had 20 years ago or 30 years ago are going to persist."
- In:
- Internal Revenue Service
- Tax Returns
- IRS
veryGood! (42)
Related
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- 'King Of The Hill' actor Johnny Hardwick, who voiced Dale Gribble, dies at 64
- Will 'Red, White & Royal Blue' be your cup of tea?
- Millions of kids are missing weeks of school as attendance tanks across the US
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- James Williams: From Academics to Crypto Visionary
- Terry Dubrow Speaks Out About Near-Death Blood Clot Scare and Signs You Should Look Out for
- Iowa motorist found not guilty in striking of pedestrian abortion-rights protester
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Rachel Morin Case: Police Say She Was the Victim of Violent Homicide
Ranking
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- 'Burnt down to ashes': Families search for missing people in Maui as death count climbs
- New book claims Phil Mickelson lost over $100M in sports bets, wanted to wager on Ryder Cup
- Statewide preschool initiative gets permanent approval as it enters 25th year in South Carolina
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Google will start deleting inactive accounts in December under new security policy
- Brody Jenner, fiancée Tia Blanco welcome first child together: 'Incredibly in love'
- Elevate Your Self-Care With an 86% Discount on Serums From Augustinus Bader, Caudalie, Oribe, and More
Recommendation
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
LGBTQ+ people in Ethiopia blame attacks on their community on inciteful and lingering TikTok videos
Lil Tay says she’s alive, claims her social media was hacked: Everything we know
New book claims Phil Mickelson lost over $100M in sports bets, wanted to wager on Ryder Cup
'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
Appeals court rules against longstanding drug user gun ban cited in Hunter Biden case
Halle Berry Is Challenging Everything About Menopause and Wants You to Do the Same
England midfielder Lauren James handed two-match ban at World Cup