OPINION
Plaintiffs-Appellants Bernard Francis Schultz and Elizabeth Mary Sabatine (hereinafter “the Schultzes”), husband and wife and residents of Hamilton County, Tennessee, filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 13 in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee. Independently, the Schultzes filed a complaint for declaratory judgment in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee, alleging that the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (“BAPC-PA” or “the Act”) violates Article I, Section 8, Clause 4 of the Constitution (the “Bankruptcy Clause”), which gives Congress the power to establish “uniform Laws on the subject of Bankruptcies throughout the United States.” U.S. Const, art. 1, § 8, cl. 4 (emphasis added). The distriсt court granted the Government’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed the Schultzes’ complaint. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
A.
Individual consumer debtors generally choose between two forms of relief afforded by the Bankruptcy Code: Chapter 7 and Chapter 13. 1 In a Chapter 7 proceeding, an individual debtor receives an immediate unconditional discharge of personal liabilities for debts in exchange for the liquidation of all non-exempt assets. See 11 U.S.C. §§ 701-784. By contrast, in a Chapter 13 proceeding, a debtor commits to repayment of a portion of his or her financial obligations over a specified period of time (generally threе to five years) in exchange for retaining non-exempt assets and receiving a broader discharge of debt than is available under Chapter 7. See 11 U.S.C. § § 1301-1330. Under the bankruptcy system prior to the BAPCPA, Pub.L. No. 109-8, 119 Stat. 23 (codified as amended in scattered sections of Title 11 of the United States Code), debtors had a *347 presumption of eligibility to file under Chapter 7, with the final determination made by the Bankruptcy Court on an individualized basis. 11 U.S.C. § 727.
In 2005, the landscape for bankruptcy filings dramatically changed. Responding to a growing belief that “bankruptcy relief may be too readily available and is sometimes used as a first resort, rather than a last resort,” H.R. Rep. NO. 109-31(1), at 4 (2005), and the prevalence of “opрortunistic personal filings and abuse,” id. at 5, Congress enacted the BAPCPA in order to require above-median income debtors to make more funds available for the payment of unsecured creditors. As a result, higher-income debtors with the ability to repay a substantial portion of their debts without significant hardship are now required to do so by filing under Chapter 13 rather than Chapter 7.
The centerpiece of the Act is the imposition of a “means test” for Chapter 7 filers, which requires would-be debtors to demonstrate financial eligibility to avoid the presumption that their bankruptcy filing is an abuse of the bankruptcy proceedings. By its terms, the BAPCPA authorizes a bankruptcy court to dismiss a debtor’s petition filed under Chapter 7 or, with the debtor’s consent, to convert such a petition to Chapter 13 “if it finds that the granting of relief would be an abuse of the provisions of [Chapter 7].” 11 U.S.C. § 707(b)(1). Under this test, the first step instructs the bankruptcy court to compare the debtor’s annualized current monthly income to the median family income of a similarly sized family in the debtor’s state of residence. If the debt- or’s current monthly income is equal to or below the median, then the presumption of abuse does not arise. 11 U.S.C. § 707(b)(7). If, however, it exceeds the median, the Act directs the court to recalculate the debtor’s income by deducting certain necessary expenses speсified by the statute. Id. § 707(b)(2)(A)(ii). These reductions are derived from the national and local standards contained in the Internal Revenue Service’s Financial Analysis Handbook. Id.; see Internal Revenue SeRV., INTERNAL REVENUE MANUAL, FINANCIAL Analysis Handbooií (“IRS Handbook”), available at http://www.irs.gov/ irm/part5/chl5s01.html.
Because of these deductions, eligibility under the new regime is calculated at least in part based on the state and county where the debtor resides. The housing expense deduction, for example, is governed by the county where the debtor resides. Id. § 5.15.1.7(4)(A). 2 Although the national standards, which identify amounts for “food, housekeeping supplies, apparel and services, and personal care products and services,” and a fixed “miscellaneous” amount, id. § 5.15.1.7(3), are mostly uniform throughout the United States, the local standards, which define amounts for housing and transportation, vary greatly.
If after deducting these necessary expenses and specified amounts, the debtor’s current monthly income exceeds certain mathematical benchmarks, then the presumption of abuse arises. 11 U.S.C. § 707(b)(2)(A)®. This presumption may be rebutted only if the debtor demonstrates special circumstances justifying any additional expenses or adjustments to the debtor’s income for which there is no reasonable alternative, and that those special circumstances reduce the debtor’s in *348 come below the specified benchmarks. Id. § 707(b)(2)(B). And even if the presumption of abuse does not apply, or has been rebutted by the debtor, the BAPCPA empowers a bankruptcy court to consider whether it believes “the debtor filed the petition in bad faith,” or whether “the totality of the circumstances ... of the debtor’s financial situation demonstrates abuse.” Id. § 707(b)(3).
To implement and enforce these reforms, the United States trustee or the bankruptcy administrator reviews a Chapter 7 debtor’s petition and files with the court a statement explaining whether a presumption of abuse arises. Id. § 704(b)(1). If the trustee determines that it does, then the trustee is directed either to file a motion to dismiss, a motion to convert the petition, or to provide a statement explaining why such а motion is inappropriate. Id. § 704(b)(2).
The BAPCPA also amended two aspects of Chapter 13. First, “disposable income” is now defined as “currently monthly income received by the debtor ... less amounts reasonably needed to be expended.” 11 U.S.C. § 1325(b)(2). If a debtor’s annualized monthly income exceeds the median family income for a similarly sized family in the applicable state, the Act requires the bankruptcy court to calculate “amounts reasonably necessary to be expended” in accordance with the same IRS Handbook’s national and local standards used in Chapter 7. Id. § 1325(b)(3). If a debtor is below the median income, the “amounts reasonably necessary to be expended” are instead determined as they were pre-BAPCPA — by the bankruptcy court assessing whether the expenses listed by the debtor in Schedule J (which must be filed along with the bankruptcy petition) are reasonably necessary for the debtor’s maintenance and support. Id. § 1325(b)(2). Second, if the debtor’s income still exceeds the median after recalculation, the Act imposes an “applicable commitment period” of “not less than 5 years.” Id. § 1325(b)(4)(A)(ii). However, if the debtor’s annualized income is less than the median, then the applicable commitment period is three years. Id. § 1325(b)(4)(A)®.
B.
On November 21, 2006, the Schultzes filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 13 in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee. On January 13, 2007, the bankruptcy court confirmed their plan, which required payment for sixty months and resulted in a pro-rata distribution to unsecured creditors of less than 100% of their allowed claims.
Concurrently, the Schultzes brought a separate suit against the United States, which challenges the five sections of the BAPCPA that employ the “means test”— Sections 707(b)(7), 707(b)(2), 704(b), 1325(b)(3), and 1325(b)(4) — under one central theory: because median-income calculations are based, at least in part, on the state and county in which the debtor resides, the BAPCPA is not a “uniform Law[] on the subject of Bankruptcies throughout the United States.” U.S. Const, art. 1, § 8, cl. 4 (emphasis added).
At the time of their Chapter 13 filing, the Schultzes had an annualized current monthly income of $84,975.84, an amount that is above the median family income for a family of five for Tennessee residents (which is $63,174), but below the median family income of Connecticut, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Maryland, New Hampshire, and New Jersey. 3 As a result of this benchmark in Tennessee, the Schultzes’ applicable commitment period *349 was five, rather than three, years, and in calculating their disposable income they were limited to the expense deductions set forth in Sections 707(b)(2)(A) and (B). 11 U.S.C. § 1326(b)(3)-(4).
After the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court granted the Government’s motion and dismissed the Schultzes’ complaint. Canvassing relevant Supremе Court precedent, the district court concluded that the “uniformity requirement does not proscribe different results in different states because of state law variations.”
Schultz v. United States,
The Schultzes timely appealed. We review de novo a district court’s grant of summary judgment.
Miller v. Admin. Office of the Courts,
II. ANALYSIS
A.
As a threshold matter, we address briefly the Government’s contention that the Schultzes lack standing to challenge two BAPCPA provisions affecting Chapter 7 bankruptcy filings: Sections 707(b)(2) and 704(b). We review de novo the question of standing,
Sandusky County Democratic Party v. Blackwell,
*350 The problem, as the Government sees it, is that the Schultzes nevеr filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition, nor do they intend to do so in the future. Although the Schultzes have shown that their income is above the applicable median family income for Tennessee, potentially subjecting them to the challenged Chapter 7 provisions, they have not established that they would be exposed to the presumption of abuse after their monthly income is reduced by allowable expenses specified by the statute. See 11 U.S.C. § 707(b)(2). The Schultzes, in turn, argue that the potential for being subject to the presumption of abuse under Chapter 7 forced them into filing under Chapter 13. And requiring a debtor to file a Chapter 7 petition with full knowledge that it would be dismissed subjects the debtor to years of litigation while his bankruptcy case, and financial situation, remain in Umbo.
The questions of whether the Schultzes were deterred from filing a Chapter 7 petition, and whether the presumption of abuse would have applied after the appropriate reductions and calculations, are irrelevant for one simple reason: the parties concede that the Schultzes have standing to challenge the Chapter 13 provisions&emdash; Sections 1325(b)(3) and (4)&emdash;which use the same state-specific median income levels and varying local standards as the Chapter 7 amendments. Based on their median family income calculation in Tennessee, the Schultzes arе currently repaying debt under a sixty-month Chapter 13 plan, and receive less favorable treatment in their plan than individuals in other states. Moreover, their housing and transportation expenses were determined by reference to the IRS Handbook, which varies by locality.
Because our resolution of the Schultzes’ Chapter 13 challenges effectively addresses the identical claims for the Chapter 7 provisions, without regard to whether they have standing to challenge those provisions, we find no need to resolve this issue. To put it simply, we could not invalidate some of the “means test” provisions without invalidating the others.
B.
1.
We turn to the central issue in this case: Is the BAPCPA a uniform law on the subject of bankruptcy? The Bankruptcy Clause of the Constitution grants Congress the power to “establish ... uniform Laws on the subject of Bankruptcies throughout the United States.” U.S. Const, art. I, § 8, cl. 4. What distinguishes these “peculiar terms” from the other Article I powers is the concept of uniformity, which, as Chief Justice Marshall noted nearly two centuries ago, “deserve[s] notice. Congress is not authorized merely to pass laws, the operation of which shall be uniform, but instead to establish uniform laws on the subject throughout the United States.”
Sturges v. Crowinshield,
Echoing Justice Marshall’s concern that the concept of “uniformity is, perhaps, incompatible with state legislation,”
id.,
the Schultzes contend that “the classification scheme adopted by Congress based upon whether a debtor is above or below the median income of his particular state of residence violates the Bankruptcy Clause because it results in some debtors receiving different bankruptcy relief under federal law based solely upon [the] state or county [in which] they happen to reside.” (Appellants’ Br. 8-9.) Implicit in their argument is what the Supreme Court has referred to as personal uniformity, or the notion that the bankruptcy laws should apply identically to individual debtors, regardless of the state or locality in which
*351
the debtor resides. The Court, however, has consistently described the Bankruрtcy Clause’s uniformity requirement as “geographical, and not personal,”
Hanover Nat’l Bank v. Moyses,
Over the last century, the Supreme Court has wrestled with the notion of geographic uniformity, ultimately concluding that it allows different effects in various states due to dissimilarities in state law, so long as the federal law applies uniformly among classes of debtors. In
Moyses,
one of the first cases dealing with the validity of a bankruptcy statute, the Court upheld the incorporation of varying state exemptions into the 1898 Bankruptcy Act.
Nearly sixty years later, the Supreme Court, applying
Moyses,
held that Congress may enact non-uniform laws to deal with geographically isolated problems as long as the law operates uniformly upon a given class of creditors and debtors.
Blanchette v. Connecticut General Ins. Corps.,
Only oncе has the Court struck down a statute as non-uniform. In
Railway Labor Executives’ Ass’n v. Gibbons,
Applying these principles to the instant case, we conclude that the BAPCPA is a constitutionally uniform law. Congress is allowed to distinguish among classes of debtors, and to treat categories of debtors differently, whether it be through the incorporation of varying state laws “affecting dower, exemptions, the validity of mortgages, priorities of payment and the like.”
Stellwagen,
Had Congress described the “means test” in explicit geographic terms, by enacting legislation exempting residents of certain states without justification, we would be faced with a significantly different case. In
St. Angelo v. Victoria Farms, Inc.,
Finding that the exemption was “not a provision which has different effects ... due to differences in the laws of these two states,” id. at 1531, and that “Congress [did not] provide[ ][any] indication that the exemption in question was intended to deal with a problem specific to North Carolina and Alabama,” id., the Ninth Circuit concluded that the law did “not apply uniformly to a defined class of debtors,” id. at 1532.
But there are key differences between the BAPCPA and the statute in
St. Angelo.
For one, as we have already noted, the BAPCPA is uniform in form: all debtors whose income is above the median family income are treated alike, as are all debtors whose income falls below. The resulting differences based on the state in which the debtor resides are analytically indistinguishable from the differences resulting from the incorporation of various state laws. For another, whereas in
St. Angelo
there was no indication that Congress intended for the exemption to deal with a problem specific to North Carolina and Alabama, the BAPCPA directly addresses regionally isolated problems. Because debtors in certаin parts of the country are likely to pay more for housing than debtors in other parts, Congress believed that the means test&emdash;or “needs-based bankruptcy relief’&emdash;could gauge varying costs of living, and thus “ensure that debtors repay creditors the maximum they can afford.” H.R. Rep. No. 109-31(1), at 2. The Bankruptcy Clause “does not deny Congress power to take into account differences that exist between different parts of the country, and to fashion legislation to resolve geographically isolated problems,”
Blanchette,
2.
The Schultzes next argue that the uniformity requirement was enacted in response tо the fear that the national government would use its power over commerce to the disadvantage of particular states. (Appellants’ Br. 12-21; Amicus Br. 4-5.) Accordingly, even if a federal bankruptcy law may vary in application from state to state, employing federal income standards enables the preferential treatment of debtors in some states over debtors in other states, a form of discriminatory treatment the Framers explicitly prohibited. We do not find their argument or their view of history compelling.
First, Supreme Court precedent lends no support to the federal versus state distinction. Moyses, Stellwagen, and Blan-chette cannot be read as standing for anything more than their precise holding: thаt Congress does not exceed its constitutional powers in enacting a bankruptcy law that permits variations based on state law or to solve geographically isolated problems. Although the Supreme Court has not specifically addressed classifications based on federal law such as those in the BAPCPA, we find no reasoning within the relevant case law explaining why employing federal variations somehow makes a bankruptcy law non-uniform. The lesson of Moyses and its progeny&emdash;that Congress may permissibly address regional variations&emdash;would apply equally to variations based on either state laws or federal statistics.
And
Gibbons
does not counsel a different result. There, the Court struck down
*354
a federal bankruptcy law as violative of the uniformity provision on the ground that the Act was a law designed for and applied to only one bankrupt railroad.
True, the Court has recognized that “the Bankruptcy Clause itself contains an affirmative limitation or restriction upon Congress’ power.”
Gibbons,
Nor does the original understanding of the Bankruptcy Clause support the federal versus state distinction that the Schultzes urge us to adopt. We need not belabor the point, as a historical account of the Bankruptcy Clause has been recounted numerous times, including once recently by this circuit.
See In re Hood,
Faced with multiple obstacles for collecting debt, and the resulting economic harm, the Framers believed that a federal — and “uniform” — bankruptcy system would be necessary to reduce the problem inherent in applying varying state insolvency and bankruptcy rules, and to rein in the pro-debtor excesses of state legislatures.
See Cent. Virginia Cmty. Coll. v. Katz,
In light of this account, we find no merit in the Schultzes’ argument that Congress can incorporate state laws, but cannot incorporate federal standards. At the time of the Constitutional Convention, the fear was not, at least in the bankruptcy context, of Congress discriminating in favor of or against a particular locality. Quite to the contrary, uniformity in the Bankruptcy Clause was viewed as a way to safeguard the nation’s interest in establishing and maintaining a single system of debt and credit without interference from the parochial or otherwise obstreperous action on the part of the fifty states.
See Dehon,
3.
One final point needs to be addressed: We are not persuaded that the heightened scrutiny applied in
United States v. Ptasynski,
However, the text and the background of the Taxing Power is wholly inapposite to that of the Bankruptcy Clause. We need not look any further than the plain language of the Bankruptcy Clause, which states: “[The Congress shall have Power] to establish ... uniform Laws on the subject of Bankruptcies throughout the United States.” U.S. Const, art. I, § 8, cl. 4. Reading these words in conjunction with the Taxing Power, another clause in Congress’s enumerated powers, reveals a striking contrast. The Taxing Power states: “The Congress shall have Power to lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, ... but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States.” U.S. Const, art. I, § 8, cl. 1 (emphasis added). If the Framers had intended both of these uniformity provisions to be read as an absolute limitation, requiring Congress to enact perfectly uniform laws, they presumably would have employed similar language in the Bankruptcy Clause by stating that “Congress shall have Power to establish Laws on the subject of Bankruptcies, but all such Laws *356 shall be uniform throughout the United States.” See Randolph J. Haines, The Uniformity Power: Why Bankruptcy is Different, 77 Am. Bankr. L.J. 129, 166-67 (2003) [hereinafter The Uniformity Power].
M’Culloch v. Maryland,
While it is true that the Supreme Court has “looked to the interpretation of [the Bankruptcy Clause] in determining the meaning of the [Taxation Power],”
Ptasynski
III. CONCLUSION
For those reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. While individual consumer debtors also may file under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code,
see Toibb v. Radloff,
. The BAPCPA also permits a debtor to deduct additional expenses for food, clothing, housing, utilities, health insurance, disability insurance, health savings accounts, and certain educational expenses, so as long as the debtor demonstrates that those additional allowances are reasonable and necessary. 1 1 U.S.C. § 707(b)(2)(A)(ii).
. Across the United States, the median family income for a family of five ranges from *349 $52,036 in Mississippi to $98,505 in Connecticut. (Joint Appendix ("JA”) 73-74.)
. The Government did not raise the standing issue at the district court, Schultz,
. Indeed, the only direct reference to the Bankruptcy Clause in the Federalist Papers conveys the idea that uniform bankruptcy laws were necessary to protect creditors in а national economy. James Madison recognized in No. 42 that "[t]he power of establishing uniform laws of bankruptcy, is so intimately connected with the regulation of commerce, and will prevent so many frauds where the parties or their property may lie or be removed into different States, that the expediency of it seems not likely to be drawn into question.” The Federalist No. 42, at 239 (James Madison) (Clinton Rossiter ed., 1961). So did Alexander Hamilton in No. 32, when he explained that the word "uniform” in the Naturalization Clause — a provision that closely mirrors that of the Bankruptcy Clause — confers on Congress the “exclusive jurisdiction” to regulate within that area, "because if each State had power to prescribe a distinct rule, there could not be a uniform rule.” The Federalist No. 32, at 199 (Alexander Hamilton) (Clinton Rossi-ter ed., 1961).
