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Minister Clemens: Family Tax Splitting Instead of Spousal Tax Splitting

Minister Clemens: Family Tax Splitting Instead of Spousal Tax Splitting
Saxony's Minister of Culture, Conrad Clemens, supports converting the tax system's "spousal splitting" into "family splitting" (file photo). / Photo: Robert Michael/dpa
From: DieSachsen News
Nearly one in two marriages remains childless. Saxony's Minister of Culture, Clemens, is calling for greater tax relief for families and single parents.

Saxony’s Minister of Culture, Conrad Clemens (CDU), believes tax relief for families and single parents is necessary. He told the German Press Agency in Dresden that the spousal income splitting system is no longer a suitable tool for supporting families. “Spousal tax splitting was introduced in 1958 to support families. But today, nearly half of all marriages remain childless.” The support is not reaching those who need it most.

Families need more targeted relief

“Families need more targeted relief. I am in favor of replacing the spousal tax splitting system with a family tax splitting system. Family tax splitting ensures that financial relief reaches those who bear the responsibility for future generations: families and single parents,” said the minister. 

According to Clemens, adjusting the tax model would benefit not only families but also single parents, who have not previously benefited from tax advantages—even though they shoulder financial and organizational burdens alone.

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In Germany, the spousal income splitting system has been in effect to date

Family income splitting is an alternative tax model in which a family’s income is pooled and distributed among all household members. The tax burden would decrease with each additional child. Under the spousal income splitting system, by contrast, the joint income of married couples is divided by two. Calls for a reform of the system are also coming from other parties, such as the SPD.

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