Trump tax law 'could put people in financial stress this year'

A new study from the JPMorgan Chase Institute documents how tax refunds impact American families’ income, saving, and spending habits. The research examines data from 2015-17 and shows that tax refunds are a “major financial event” that effectively “resets” the spending and savings habits of the families that get them.

Amar Hamoudi, one of the report’s co-authors, says that the impacts of a tax refund go beyond 6 months, and into the following year.

“There are two types of impact,” he says. “Their daily spending patterns — even by a couple of bucks — is higher. And [the second], the amount of cash they have on hand. Their checking account balances are about 11% higher than when they received [their refund].”

Financial stress

With tax season now underway, Americans are starting to see how the new Tax Cuts and Jobs Act has impacted their refunds. Some have complained their returns are lower, while others have been hit with surprise tax bills.

The JPMorgan report doesn’t point to the Trump tax cuts directly, but with refunds representing such a big moment in many households’ financial trajectory, lower refunds or unexpected tax bills could have a big impact on their finances.

“There no question that surprise could put people in financial stress this year,” says Fiona Greig, a co-author of the study. “How does this change people’s spending and savings patterns?”

“People are going into this tax season with much more ambiguity over where they’ll land,” she says.

Hamoudi says a refund that is smaller this year (compared to last year) could change a family’s spending habits.

“When you file,” he says, “if you get a lot less than [prior refunds], what you spend is lower this year. That could end up happening.”

But, he adds that he expects families will “adjust to the new normal.”

The report shows most Americans use their refund as a savings tool, either purposely or not. They point to the opacity and complexity of the tax system for inspiring this type of behavior. Underwithholding can cause taxpayers to owe a balance to the IRS, which could take some by surprise and cause problems for their families.

“Even in a steady state world it makes sense why people would tilt the scale towards getting a refund,” says Greig.

A ‘watershed’ moment

According to the report, 80% of those studied received a tax refund to the tune of 6 weeks’ take-home income — roughly 10% of their yearly take-home pay. For households saddled with a tax bill, that payment equated to 2.5 weeks’ income. In the study, JPMorgan Chase Institute analyzed financial data from over 8 million families who used a Chase checking account to either receive a tax refund direct deposit, or make an electronic tax payment.