Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Thailand News and Discussion Forum | ASEANNOW

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Tampon tax: Does being female in the US carry unfair costs?

Featured Replies

Tampon tax: Does being female in the US carry unfair costs?
By COLLEEN LONG and JENNIFER PELTZ

NEW YORK (AP) — Margo Seibert and Natalie Brasington don't think women should have to pay a "period tax," and like a growing number of other women, they are publicly questioning whether being female in the U.S. carries unfair costs.

The pair are among five New York City women who filed a lawsuit last week arguing that it was unconstitutional for the state to levy sales tax on tampons and sanitary napkins while offering medical product exemptions to many other items used by both genders, like lip balm, foot powder and dandruff shampoo.

The case, they say, is about more than the few cents in tax levied on each pack.

Sick of the social taboo, and frustrated by a lack of access for some to a staple, these women and others are talking very publicly about menstruation and gaining political traction that would have been impossible a generation ago.

A national push to abolish sales tax on tampons is gathering steam, led by social media campaigns like #periodswithoutshame. At least seven states are now considering legislation. Illinois lawmakers were holding a hearing on the latest proposal Wednesday. Connecticut legislators discussed the issue Monday.

Cosmopolitan magazine launched an online petition, and even President Barack Obama has questioned why the items are taxed.

"I tend to talk about my period quite a bit, to anyone who will listen," said Seibert, a 31-year-old actress and founder of an online campaign that promotes a "shame-free" period.

Brasington, a 31-year-old photographer, said the tax affects women disproportionately and is a genuine burden for poorer women.

"Being a woman is so expensive," she said.

Jennifer Weiss-Wolf, a vice president at the NYU School of Law's Brennan Center for Justice, said she began writing articles and op-eds on "menstrual equity" when she discovered food pantries were desperate for sanitary napkins and tampons because poor women can't afford them.

The tax campaign reflects a broader debate over "gender pricing," or charging women and men different rates for similar products and services, from haircuts to razors to T-shirts.

New York City's consumer protection agency studied the cost of 800 common household items last year and found that products marketed to women cost, on average, 7 percent more than similar products for men.

"Women's outcry over this issue isn't just about the tax on tampons. It's a reflection of the routine unfairness that seeps into our everyday lives," said Sonia Ossorio, president of the National Organization for Women in New York. "At the end of the day, the tampon tax movement is one small way to challenge the broader sexism that still persists. Because that's the real taboo here."

While women's advocates have long lamented that many women's products cost more, their providers say there can be legitimate reasons — a more decorative product or more complicated haircut, for instance. And some have noted that women sometimes pay less: for life and auto insurance, for example.

Nationwide, 40 states tax feminine hygiene products, deeming them non-necessities or even "luxury items," while making exceptions for products as similar as adult incontinence pads.

Currently, five U.S. states exempt tampons and other feminine hygiene products from their sales tax, which varies around the country from about 2.9 percent to as high as 7.5 percent. Another five states have no sales tax.

New York taxes tampons and sanitary napkins as tools "to control a normal bodily function and to maintain personal cleanliness."

The 4 percent state sales tax on the products costs New York women millions of dollars a year; estimates range from about $7 million to twice that, a minute fraction of the state's $142 billion budget.

Advocates say the cost, however small it may seem, is burdensome for poor women, who also can't purchase the products with food stamps.

"Having one's period is not a luxury," state Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal, a Democrat who has proposed abolishing the tax. "Because of our biology, we bear this extra cost, and the state should not compound it."

The state Department of Taxation and Finance declined to comment, citing the lawsuit. Two major manufacturers of feminine hygiene products, P&G, the maker of the Tampax brand, and Edgewell Personal Care Co., the maker of the Playtex brand, didn't respond to inquiries this week about the tax issue.

Zoe Salzman, the attorney on the New York case, said they'd push to get a judge to rule the tax unlawful.

"If men had to use these products every month, they would already be tax-exempt," she said.

Meanwhile, the legislative proposal has yet to get a hearing, though supporters are hopeful about its prospects, especially since Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo recently said the tax should be abolished.

That wasn't the sense in Utah, where a legislative committee last month nixed a proposal to tax-exempt the items. While some members of the all-male committee supported the idea, others questioned where the state would draw the line on what to tax in the future.

The Los Angeles Times, in an editorial last week, expressed similar concerns in opposing a tax exemption that California lawmakers are considering.

Overseas, Canada removed taxes on the items last year, and British leaders, who have set the tax at the lowest possible level, have considered doing away with it altogether.

aplogo.jpg
-- (c) Associated Press 2016-03-10

Don't worry - be happy

Donald's gonna eliminate all taxes for tampons

Right after he challenges China

You heard it here first

Even president Obama asks why tampons are taxed. Why does he use them?

Are they kidding? What a Joke! Our country is going down the sewer over the last 7 years and someone comes up with this stupidity! They need to visit Obama's Socialist Venezuela where you can't buy Tampons, with or without Tax! God, lets get rid of these Socialist or Nanny State Ideas! Get a Life!

Are they kidding? What a Joke! Our country is going down the sewer over the last 7 years and someone comes up with this

stupidity! They need to visit Obama's Socialist Venezuela where you can't buy Tampons, with or without Tax! God, lets get

rid of these Socialist or Nanny State Ideas! Get a Life!

Women's items cost more because many of them think more expensive is better. Whereas most guys have a limit on what they are willing to spend on toiletry items. Same goes for clothes. However when you start talking about motorcycles, cars, electronics, boats, and other necessities. you will see that women are more restrained.

Are they kidding? What a Joke! Our country is going down the sewer over the last 7 years and someone comes up with this

stupidity! They need to visit Obama's Socialist Venezuela where you can't buy Tampons, with or without Tax! God, lets get

rid of these Socialist or Nanny State Ideas! Get a Life!

So less tax is nanny state. I always thought nanny states required more taxes. And socialist policies require less taxes?

Women's items cost more because many of them think more expensive is better. Whereas most guys have a limit on what they are willing to spend on toiletry items. Same goes for clothes. However when you start talking about motorcycles, cars, electronics, boats, and other necessities. you will see that women are more restrained.

Maybe they should have Tampons in a Variety of colors? I think good idea! What do you think?

Even president Obama asks why tampons are taxed. Why does he use them?

Because he's a Red. laugh.png

Do American men pay tax for razors and shaving cream?

Exemptions like this cause confusion.

Australia exempted tampons and a few other items from GST when it was introduced.

It caused, and still does confusion, as it sometimes depends on how an item is sold, eg cooked or uncooke.

It is much simpler to have GST on everything and not confuse the system.

Hey Ladies,The men have to pay a tax on the "Just For Men" products also.Tax is Tax people.

how stupid

""I tend to talk about my period quite a bit, to anyone who will listen," said Seibert, a 31-year-old actress and founder of an online campaign that promotes a "shame-free" period.

She must be a great dinner companion.

If this goes through then they should also eliminate the shaving cream tax.

A female friend once told me that if men had menstrual cycles, tampons and sanitary pads would be free in public restrooms like toilet paper and soap.

Not saying I agree with her, but it's an interesting thought.

Most states just have a flat sales tax on everything purchased. California does this on everything but food. The idea to exempt tampons just opens a can of worms and what is taxed. Maybe we should exempt tax on toilet paper and Depends too. The good old US of A is going nuts and the politicians are even more nuts for even considering such things.

Can't remember who; said "If men could become pregnant abortion would be sacrament" The law is male always has been.

I think the word you're looking for is "sacrosanct".

A few Christians probably had near strokes when they read your post. laugh.png

Edited by up-country_sinclair

There's been a campaign in the UK to remove VAT (the equivalent to sales tax) from what are coyly called 'feminine hygiene products' for some time now.

The government have reduced the rate from the normal 20% to 5% but refuse to remove it completely; blaming the EU.

Yes, EU regulations do say that the lowest rate of VAT should be 5%; but do not say which products a member state's government can and can't make exempt.

Pre menopausal women have periods, so they have to buy these products and taxing them is a nice little earner for governments.

Maybe menstruating women should unite and walk around once a month with blood dripping from between their legs in protest at this taxing of an essential.

They should contact their state legislative representative. Most have never met a tax they didn't like

Create an account or sign in to comment

Recently Browsing 0

  • No registered users viewing this page.

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.