Shrapnel wrote:
As long as the athlete is also actively pursuing a degree (though they don't have to finish) tuition, fees, books, and supplies are all tax-free. But if they are now considered employees of the school, I don’t see how that could continue.
Those are expenses, not income. You don't pay tax on your expenses (other than value added taxes, of course), and there is absolutely no reason why those expenses cannot continue to be deductions/tax credits against the income realized from scholarships.
Of the ten years that I spent in undergraduate and professional education, I had scholarships for 9, and every year I had to declare those scholarships as income, and against my tax owing I could claim credits from my tuition and other education expenses. If a graduate student can write off these amounts against employment earnings from a research or teaching associateship, why would the situation be any different for a student athlete?
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--James