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Why is India's section 80U deduction more about taxpayer status than about adding up disability-related bills?
People often assume a disability deduction should work like a reimbursement system driven by receipts. Please explain why section 80U works differently, why taxpayer status matters more than a pile of expenses, and why that still makes the deduction meaningful.
Related Questions
Why is Canada's disability supports deduction about earning income or studying with support, not about recognizing every difficult cost of living with a disability?
People often hear 'disability supports deduction' and assume CRA is broadly acknowledging the extra cost of disability. Please explain why the rule is narrower than that, why the support has to connect to work or education, and why this deduction belongs to a different lane from general sympathy or general medical spending.
Why is Germany's disability lump-sum about recognized status, not a running tally of hard life costs?
People often assume German disability relief simply follows the amount of extra cost a family faced during the year. Please explain why the lump-sum approach is more status-based and less reimbursement-like than that.
Why is German motor-vehicle tax relief for disability a status-based legal entitlement and not a broad fairness adjustment for difficult mobility?
People often assume that if disability makes driving and transport harder, the vehicle tax system should just ease up. Please explain why the actual German relief is more formal than that, why official disability markers matter so much, and why this is not simply a case-by-case sympathy discount.
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