Good. This should come with the caveat that they are going after ultra-high net worth individuals.
An agent spending a day going through the returns of some random person who makes 40-60k to see that their return was off by $30 is an absolute waste of time and resources.
The IRS needs to fry the biggest fish for a change, instead of ignoring them or being too scared to face a well-funded legal team.
There's plenty of low-income fraud that they should be tracking down as well. A politician local to me filed for PPP loans for multiple different LLCs he managed that had no trace of employees and got like $150k from the Feds. Would love for that to be looked into, but the backlog is real.
"The new IRS chief, a former management consultant who briefly ran the agency on an acting basis in 2013, said that he would enforce Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen's pledge to not increase historical audit rates for Americans earning under $400,000.
The final 2017 audit rate for earners between $200,000 and $500,000 0.4%, far below the 2.3% for that bracket in 2010, according to IRS data."
Didn't the legislature try to introduce a bill to prevent using the new agents/funding against lower earners, and it flopped? So it turns out all along no one actually wants to keep anyone accountable to such "promises."
Statement of Purpose: To prevent the use of additional Internal Revenue Service Funds from being used for audits of taxpayers with taxable incomes below $400,000 in order to protect low- and middle-income earning American taxpayers from an onslaught of audits from an army of new Internal Revenue Service auditors funded by an unprecedented, nearly $80.000.000.000, infusion of new funds.
Vote Result: Amendment Rejected
> legislature try to introduce a bill to prevent using the new agents/funding against lower earners
Money is fungible. This was a messaging bill. If they were serious, they'd create an independently-funded agency within the IRS with the sole mandate of going after high earners.
If the bill was a message, so was the response. "Fuck you, we'd rather not be hindered by such promises."
-----------------------------------
RE: below [due to timeout]
>The original bill already passed.
factcheck: false. Original bill passed almost 12 hours later on the same day[0] [1]. The (above) amendment was voted on in the early morning, with the unamended increase passing in the afternoon.
>Congress has more important things to do.
factcheck: false. All 100 senators voted on the floor for a full vote on the amendment. None found they had something more important to do that would cause them not to cast a vote.
>The executive has stated its position.
factcheck: True. Either congress ignored the position, or they followed the privately endorsed position rather than the publicly endorsed one.
[0] https://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/roll_call_votes/vote1172/vote_117_2_00325.htm
[1] https://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/roll_call_votes/vote1172/vote_117_2_00296.htm
Then more money will have to be printed. So we get a raise, but the raise still doesn't match the hurdle rate, while demand remains the same. That's some dystopian fucked up shit there.
People have a really simplistic view of what wealthy "compliant" tax returns look like. There is a massive amount of tax fraud at the wealthiest levels -- but since the IRS rarely prosecutes, people just assume the returns are merely avoidance instead of evasion.
Look at what's come out from Trump's historical tax returns -- literally tens (if not hundreds?) of millions of dollars in tax fraud that was just never prosecuted. Had the authorities looked before the statute of limitations had elapsed, there would have likely been criminal charges.
The IRS rarely prosecutes high earners because it's expensive and it's possible they fail.
Once you get out of simple W2 and 1099 income things get real complicated real fast. So complicated the IRS can get it wrong themselves. The more complicated the return, the more subjective they become. When the rules are so complex or the terms so vague that things can be left up to interpretation or they do not capture all edge cases it becomes very easy to end up in a scenario where you have to prove intent to commit fraud if you really want to prosecute.
There is no doubt that the IRS leaves plenty of money on the table by not pursuing more high earners, but who wants to do the hard work when the easy work is just to compare reported W2 and 1099 income statements with returns?
If we wanted to get serious about going after high earners we would simplify the tax code. We'd get rid of certain carry overs all together. At some point we may even tax revenue instead of profits. That might sound wildly "anti-capitalist" but it's the only way to eliminate the ambiguity. We could create different incentives that reverse the burden.
I can think of a funny example I saw the other day where some dope was telling people they can deduct their dog as a business expense if they work from home because the dog is a "guard dog". The thing is you actually can do this. If you do this with any old dog it obviously would not hold up… but where is the line? How much training does a dog need to be considered a guard dog? How many hours a day is the dog actually guarding? You going to interview the dog? What if the dog dies or runs away? The IRS is not going to scrutinize every dog. There are a ridiculous amount of things just like this that people write off as expenses. If you want to successfully prosecute you've got to really make the case that it was intentional—like that there was no dog at all. Otherwise it's just difficult, and there's so much lower hanging fruit. You want to go back and forth over a dog with or just go after this person who failed to report a PayPal transaction? The latter is so much easier. Guaranteed win.
> you've got to really make the case that it was intentional—like that there was no dog at all
which would be easy, as an animal ought to have been registered and thus have a registration from which an easy check should've been possible.
If the tax code deems that expenses such as a guard dog is something that can be deducted, then why is the nuance relevant at all? It's a dog, and it does guarding duties during business hours. Whether it performed the guarding duties well or not is also irrelevant - the expense of a dog would be the same whether they do guarding well, or sloppily.
So the only opportunity for such fraud is if the dog didn't exist, and thus you're not really paying the expenses associated with said dog. I fail to see why having a dog and being able to expense it from your income is such a big deal.
Edit: in fact, i personally would like to see the tax code simplified, so that each human can claim _all_ expenses for living, from their income, and only ever get taxed on profits (which is money they did not consume).
> The ultra-rich are largely law-abiding and have the paperwork to prove it.
Oh really?
"Credit Suisse, the collapsed Swiss bank taken over by UBS Group in a hastily arranged bailout earlier this month, may bring with it a fresh set of regulatory and legal problems for its new owner.
For years, the bank has provided a safe haven for wealthy American clients to hide assets from the IRS — even after it was caught and prosecuted for doing the same thing more than a decade ago"
Many will take whatever opportunity they can get. Whether its complex offshore structures or moving it to banks that will greet you with a wink and a nod. As long as it doesn't go to the IRS.
I'm not saying all wealthy individuals do this, or even most. But the amount of money that is intentionally hidden from the IRS is incredibly substantial. They have done the studies.
"Law-abiding" is not a binary concept. There are some activities that clearly abide by the law, and there are some activities that clearly break the law. But there is also a wide gray between the extremes, where it can be difficult to determine what the law actually is without going to court.
The best practices for tax planning deliberately go into the gray area, because there is money to be made in the expected case. Even if you are audited and found breaking the law, the consequences are rarely that severe. But the same reasons that make going into the gray zone profitable in tax planning also make it profitable to audit people who practice tax planning.
They are "largely law-abiding" because collectively, they've bought the ability to call their actions law-abiding.
Warren Buffet pays a smaller % of his income in tax than he secretary does, and he's said that himself. You know how that's possible? Because Buffet and people like him bought off the government ages ago and, collectively, said to the IRS "we're going to tell you what we are going to pay, and you're going to deal with it, OK?", and continually lobby congress and say that whatever minuscule amount they actually do pay is WAY too high and needs to be cut, and cut again.
His income is probably mostly capital gains, which are taxed at a lower rate than earned income. There are reasons for that which economists can discuss, I have no opinion myself.
>Warren Buffet pays a smaller % of his income in tax than he secretary does, and he's said that himself
You say that like it should be shocking, but I don't see why that would be the expectation.
You could easily come at it from the opposite direction and wonder why Buffet pays so much more than his secretary in dollar terms, yet they get the same police, roads, schools, and public services.
It's because the argument comes not from rational thought, but first from ideology - that the richer person _should_ bear a higher burden (which they do, but just not percentage wise compared to their total wealth or income). Then they find examples of such, and use it as evidence.
Buffett pays less in %, because he is not earning wage labour. That's not tax fraud, nor is it illegal.
He says. He has every opportunity to pay those higher taxes, but doesn't. As he has said numerous time, people say things but if you follow their money, they believe other things.
This is a very fair point, and I see it all the time from all sides of the political specturm. Same for people advocating for higher taxes to support poverty programs, green power, ect.
Most people know where their checkbooks are but aren't using them. What they really mean is either 1) I wan't someone else to pay taxes for X, or 2) Im willing to pay more taxes, but only if everyone else does it too.
Thats not to say either of those positions are necessarily bad, just that people aren't very honest about expressing them, or possibly with themselves.
> This should come with the caveat that they are going after ultra-high net worth individuals.
It sounds like that's the plan:
"It also aims to help close the "tax gap" between taxes owed and those paid, estimated by Treasury at some $600 billion a year, by focusing new audits on the wealthiest Americans."
Hopefully we can avoid electing clowns long enough to see this bear fruit.
The $600 reporting threshold has always been there (though I agree, it should be retroactively pinned to CPI from when it was introduced). Most banks through Zelle previously would automatically submit all transaction history to the IRS anyways; After all, the IRS can absolutely track how much money is entering/leaving your account on a given month, which is how they’d flag you for an audit if things don’t add up to what you reported.
The only real “change” was that now Venmo/Cash App will be required to, too— and even that got delayed.
>Good. This should come with the caveat that they are going after ultra-high net worth individuals.
If people work hard and make alot of money you want them targeted? Wow! If only I could waste billions of our taxes without accountability.
Those ultra rich hire people, and have lot's of write off's and know the system. Tax code is difficult on purpose.
There is a history of IRS targeting certain groups, while ignoring the others. If you think they wont target people that are helpless and can't fight you've got to wake up.
Not too long ago: "Internal Revenue Service says it gave extra scrutiny to organizations with the names "Tea Party" or "Patriot" seeking tax-exempt status.
No criminal charges were ever filed against IRS officials.
No charges were filed because they didn’t commit a crime.
Targeting some dopes creating a 501 as a “Tea Party” group is called targeting the low hanging fruit. So is aggressively enforcement of credits for non-custodial parents, etc.
Meanwhile, those hard working ultra-rich real estate developers committing various frauds with self-dealing, fake appraisals, etc walk away with millions of dollars and pay little or nothing.
> Not too long ago: "Internal Revenue Service says it gave extra scrutiny to organizations with the names "Tea Party" or "Patriot" seeking tax-exempt status.
When they investigated, "progressive" and "occupy" (as in Occupy Wall Street) were also on the scrutiny list. They were (correctly) looking for political orgs masquerading as "social welfare" orgs to avoid disclosing donors.
(Also on the list of terms: "open source software", "medical marijuana", etc.)
>If people work hard and make alot of money you want them targeted? Wow! If only I could waste billions of our taxes without accountability.
Uh, yes, that's the whole point. If you win at capitalism, you have to pay the cost to keep the whole thing going.
>Those ultra rich hire people, and have lot's of write off's and know the system. Tax code is difficult on purpose.
They also hire people to hide money for them. See: the Swiss banking system, Cayman Islands LLC structure, etc...
>If you think they wont target people that are helpless and can't fight you've got to wake up
That's what they DO do. They go after the low-hanging fruit significantly more because the poor person knows they'll get fucked if they don't do what the IRS says. The rich person will hire lawyers.
>Not too long ago: "Internal Revenue Service says it gave extra scrutiny to organizations with the names "Tea Party" or "Patriot" seeking tax-exempt status.
The Tea Party was founded by a bunch of billionaires that didn't want to pay any taxes at all. Seeing them form an organization to "donate" money to (with the express intent on using said money to "lobby" the government to reduce taxes even further) and ask for it to be tax-exempt is the peak example of everything that is wrong with unchecked capitalism.
One year I got a paper mail from IRS where they said that there were potentially unpaid taxes, but it could be that you haven't filed Schedule D form for RSU. I was very pleased with it - it clearly stated what I didn't do, what I should do (file needed forms), how to contact etc.
I updated everything providing what was needed and sent it, everything was ok.
Comparing to the messy interactions with tax guys that I had long time ago in my former home country (with hints of needs of bribes), when I was leaving it, I'll rather have to deal with IRS any day.
I know this sounds crazy, but how about we apply the law equally to everyone? I have a difficult time seeing how targeting or generalizing any group of people rather than individual likelihood of tax evasion is an appropriate application of resources.
Currently they prioritize going after people on low to middle income, so if there is additional funding it should go towards the people currently being ignored.
Yeah, last time this topic came up, I seem to recall that it turned out the vast majority of "audits" claimed to be targeted at the lower-classes were automated, mostly intended to catch common "whoopsies", and usually resulted in a pretty chill "yo, we think you owe X for reason Y, send us a check if you agree, or else perform the following steps to dispute" letters, not, like, thugs knocking down someone's door and demanding to comb through all their records from the last seven years.
... while audits for rich folks required heavy human involvement right from the beginning, so of course the numbers are skewed such that it looks like they are targeting the middle and lower classes, if you treat both types of audit as identical.
Plus audits on rich folks who tend to employ tax lawyers and specialists would usually not deliberately commit fraud, but use unintended "loopholes" which would require some sort of tribunal to decide legality (such as a court or something).
These sorts of audits may or may not return any extra revenue.
The highest likelihood of tax fraud are people who commit small fraud that, to them, seem undetectable.
Because it’s unprofitable. Think of the IRS like the sales staff of a business. Taxes are the revenues. No business would be rewarded for wasting marketing and sales budget on chasing customers who have no ability to pay.
Sure you could go after a low income tax cheat, but you end up just putting them in debt if they don’t actually have the ability to pay you.
The better analogy is should police pull over someone going 120mph or going 80mph if they have to choose.
Clear answer IMO. Similarly should the government prioritize more serious offenses over lesser? It's a bigger crime to evade $1,000,000 in taxes than it is to evade a $1,000 tax bill.
so the analogy is flawed, because you a priori assume the higher income people would perpetrate a higher amount of fraud.
> It's a bigger crime to evade $1,000,000 in taxes than it is to evade a $1,000 tax bill.
Yes, but is earning a higher income make you a higher probability of higher fraud? I don't think fraud is distributed like that. In fact, i would argue that the higher income you are, the more likely you are to use professional services for taxes, which means you are less likely to commit fraud!
> Is it unfair that police patrol for speeders on the highway more than on bike paths?
yes, if the majority of the people are on bike paths, and they're the majority of all frauds.
Esp. if to drive on the highway, you are often driven by a chauffeur, who are professionals and knows exactly which section of the highway allows you to go fast without breaking the legal limits.
Therefore, patrolling the highways in lieu of bike paths means you will miss all of the small time speeders, and occasionally just catch a big speeder. I would imagine the trade off is not worth the loss in speeding tickets.
It's far easier for a business to evade paying taxes. Half the businesses I visit in NYC admit they want cash so they don't have to report it on their taxes.
To the contrary, I think they should spend their time there is the best return on investment.
The number one priority of the IRS I should be recovering funds, not ideological Warfare.
Recovering funds should not be political, and to make it so is a race to the bottom. Once you start targeting specific groups, you normalize all kinds of bad behavior.
>To the contrary, I think they should spend their time there is the best return on investment.
That would mean that lower-income people would be investigated much more frequently than a multi-billionaire. Which is currently the case - harassing a lower-income family over a $500 or $1k difference is an open-and-shut case, the lowest of the lowest hanging fruit. Going after a billionaire is much harder, more time consuming, and definitely costly, even if the potential payout is orders of magnitude higher.
If the IRS can catch 100 X $1K errors in an hour, they should do this instead of spending 100 hours to catch a 10k error.
That is to say, the top priority should be getting the most money back for the tax payer, and Not fighting a culture war that assumes poor = good person and rich = bad person.
There has to be random enforcement across the board. If people with lower incomes know they are never audited, it will encourage more people to under-report more. Obviously each individual audit won't be financially profitable for IRS, but the fact that it is enforced will send a message to millions of people that under-reporting a few hundred bucks is not worth it and it's better to pay the taxes on it.
This is great news. I know an IRS engineer who just retired. He was managing a critical system at the time of retirement and the horror stories I've heard from him about it makes it clear they need to bring in people to not just improve auditing, but also modernize their infrastructure. Much of it is stuck in the 80s (or worse). Hopefully they overhaul existing systems and implement new ones to go along with hiring "more data scientists than they ever have"
I listen to right wing (AM) radio on my way to work. (It works better than coffee I swear) - they're freaking out, or rather, trying to freak out their listeners about this. It's funny because it seems like a third of their ads are for listeners who are being audited or owe taxes. I guess being patriotic is limited to cheering on violence but not paying their share.
Those same listeners took the advice a few years ago and were protecting freedom by buying shelf Nevada corporations and rolling 401ks into “Gold IRAs”
That stuff targets old people and people like tradesmen who own their own businesses, but are kinda dumb about business. Some of the ads are fake as well, bought by dark money orgs.
I don't understand this argument. How do we pay for infrastructure, or any public service? Privatization? Private companies have proven many times that they cannot be trusted to work in the best interest of people. Just look at any company town.
The fact that I have to file the return is itself part of the problem. This process should be “irs gives you a refund or tells you what you owe and then you either dispute it or take it”. The audit practice invites mischief into a system where someone makes a judgement about when to audit, and the process is the punishment.
Just tell me what I owe, and if I feel like it I can dispute it. If they can validate a tax return they obviously know what would be correct.
It's not like turbotax is some monopoly on tax filing software. There are at least a couple free tax filing options now available. That should in theory mean that turbotax is losing it's political power as time goes on.
This comment is on the right track, but is inadequate. It invites the typical response that it "can't be done," because X, Y, Z.
The truth is closer to yes. Yes, there could be (and is in civilized countries) a web based form that lists everything the government expects to apply this year. And it could be quite accurate. Then you spend fifteen minutes (typically) entering in your deductions or any missing data. Does the math. Reduces the manual process from a week to under an hour.
(I understand that third-party software does reduce that time as well, but shouldn't need to exist.)
So yes, it can be done, because I've done it when I had a contract in another country.
Granted, yes. But as more digital capabilities creep into the financial system, what if gov knows what you owe (and kills turbotax market) but still mandates you file a return?
IRS has happily kept thousands of dollars of my money when I filed incorrectly. A few years later I went to the IRS office for an unrelated matter and I asked the agent “can you look up year XXXX and see if I was owed a refund?” Agent looks up and says yup, you were owed a large refund. Too late to get it back now, but we strongly encourage you to correctly refile your taxes for that year.
So they had done my taxes and knew they owed me money and, basically, stole my money. If I owed them money they would have immediately hit me with a bill or an audit. And on top of it they wanted me to refile my taxes “correctly” after they had already done my taxes.
This “do your thing and we’ll do it, too, and we’ll see if you got it wrong” is one of the most stressful aspects of American bureaucracy.
How long ago was the missed year? I missed a filing from 3 years prior, in which I was owned money, and got it back no problem. Also since I do my own taxes, sometimes I make mistakes, and they correct them and I'm pleasantly surprised by a larger refund.
Are there any alternative tax mechanisms to income taxes that you'd support? I've heard many times that VAT or consumption taxes are far more efficient than income taxes. Seems like they're also easier to enforce (except in regions with significant black markets). I've also heard that taxing land & non-invested property is a good idea, too.
what about the old plan as just-the-sales-tax(local+state+federal), so nobody needs to file anything, and no need of IRS at all.
* flat-tax-rate as the default,itemized if you prefer:
* charge less for regular food, educational and medical expenses
* charge a little more for travel and non-essential leisure expenses
* charge even more for luxury expenses
* charge nothing before your spend reach a certain point, e.g. $5000
Someone has to figure out how to design the tax rate, point is that, we no longer need the IRS and annual or quarterly tax reports.
There are a few states did well with no income tax(just sales tax and property tax), the nation could do the same, don't forget to short Intuit if this happens.
There have been a number of studies done that demonstrate that a consumption tax (which is effectively what this is) is considered to be regressive because they disproportionately affect poor people.
I'm all for simplifying the tax code (e.g. eliminating many deductions) as long as we also eliminate loopholes that rich people often use to avoid paying taxes on their income.
It disproportionately taxes poor people over rich people.
Also, how do you report how much you've spent to the IRS? That seems even harder. Some people have suggested a "prebate" of a payment that people get that helps with their first part of the sales tax, but that breaks down after a while.
There are also the same problems of "under the table" behavior.
>It disproportionately taxes poor people over rich people.
I always hear this said about national sales taxes, but it just doesn’t really jive with me as valid. It really seems to make the assumption that consumption doesn’t actually increase based upon how wealthy you are. When it obviously does. I don’t know many poor folks buying super cars, yachts, airplanes, and multimillion dollar homes. Yet I know a few wealthy folks with multiple of each.
If I'm wealthy, it's most likely that I own a business. If I have a business, then it will have bought that airplane, yacht or car all as tax-deductible purchases. Business then lets me use those at its discretion. My personal car can be an '87 Chevette.
Best example I'm personally familiar with is the carpenter whose Corvette was a company car.
All of those things are still purchased though, whether it’s a company or an individual. Personally I thought the purpose of taxes was to provide the government its funding, not punish.
I was addressing the point about wealthy people paying more in sales taxes than the poor. That is correct, but if you have access to the wider range of tax shelters that the wealthy do, more of your expenses can be tax deductible.
I agree that taxes shouldn't be punitive, but that's another discussion.
The thing is poor people have to spend all their income, wealthy people don't. So poor people have all their income taxed, while wealthy people surely aren't spending their last dollar on yachts for the most part. Wealthy people have lots of leftover income to invest and make yet even more money instead. At least with an income tax you can ensure no one pays taxes on their first $x and such.
Still doesn’t jive. Taxes are there to fund government, not punish success. Whether or not you have a large income or a small one, your consumption is what it is and to a degree can be controlled.
Why not only tax finite resources like land & oil or sin taxes only or something else instead? Main differences that come to mind are tax collecting efficiency and value judgement. Is it better to punish the poor by having all their income effectively taxed so that we can avoid punishing the rich? Someone has to have the burden, and every additional dollar is worth less to someone with lots of dollars. But there's also the effects. Consumption taxes make a lot of sense in touristy areas, but do large swaths of society want a tax system that reduces class mobility? There are always discussions how to get around it, like give everyone a monthly payment to make up the difference, don't apply the tax to certain things, etc., but they're work arounds.
None, even if the $40k a year spends every penny they are still well above the average poverty rate for the US, unless the household has more than 4 individuals.
Take the poor family living paycheck to paycheck - they spend practically every cent they earn on the basic necessities. Whereas I find it highly doubtful that your wealthy friends are spending every single dollar they earn every year (surely they save/invest a large percentage of their earnings, right?)
This is where our instincts fail us. https://www.taxpolicycenter.org/briefing-book/who-bears-burd... at the bottom (Figure 1) shows that the top quintile would have their share of current federal income tax move from 84% to 65%. The lowest quintile would have a disproportionate impact for them, but would not move the needle on actual revenue. (Right now they have a negative impact due to the EITC. This doesn't take into account social security and medicare, mind you.)
The middle three quintiles would see their tax burden increase significantly. Consider that taxes are only 10 or 15% after your deduction until you get into the third quintile. The proposed sales tax would have to be 22% to be revenue neutral. If there is some sort of offset to disadvantaged households, you would need a 34% tax to sustain revenue.
So their tax burden would go up.
We don't really internalize how much more the top income brackets make and don't spend. The top 1% of Americans have about 16 times more wealth than the bottom 50%. https://www.cnbc.com/2021/06/23/how-much-wealth-top-1percent... - Their effective tax rate is going to be above 22% today, so even if they spent every last dime their taxes would go down, and as we know the wealthy are able to save more, so their tax burden will go down further still.
Most of us would need to do very little filing-related work every year if anti-tax politicians who think their crusade is worth wasting hundreds of person-lifetimes of hours every single year, and tax prep companies' lobbyists (probably with, ah, some overlap between these two causes) would stop standing in the way, no major overhaul of the tax code required.
People still file sales taxes, just not individual. It's the duty of the business doing the selling to collect the sales tax, file, and transmit those funds to the state.
As long as we have taxes we will need a tax collector (i.e. the IRS) to handle all the filings and to make sure people are paying their taxes.
The IRS absolutely could be doing more. They could let you log-in to a portal with your tax return prefilled out based on all the filings done by your employer. But the tax preparation industry has lobbied against this, and the IRS is underfunded (they still haven't processed all of last year's paper returns).
Also a lot of states that don't have income tax, receive lots of federal funding.... Which comes from income taxes.
This is a good first start, but won't work for everyone. E.g. we got a new roof with solar. The solar is tax deductible. But is the roof? My options are (a) no (b) the portion with solar on top (c) all. Asking around, different people have taken different options, and no option is un-taken.
Option (c) will probably never get audited and we all know it. I won't be taking it.
They can generate 95% of returns completely accurately. For people with advanced situations they can feel free to file their own correct copy or pay an accountant.
People wanting to deduct their charitable contributions should have to work harder to do that. I shouldn’t be inconvenienced because of that.
Of course if they did that you wouldn’t need 80K new feds, and since they tend to vote lockstep for more endless government, well it’s quite convenient isn’t it?
The US government is great as building Dark Patterns in their benefits programs.
There is one major party that thinks government doesn’t and can’t work well, so it’s no wonder that lots of the stakeholders design systems that frustrate users.
I don't suppose any of that staff will be able to get around to what most other countries do with taxes, which can be summed up as "This is what we know about you, is it correct? If not, please correct it."
As opposed to the US, "Tell me what I already know, and if it doesn't match, we'll make your life hell for an indeterminate period of time."
I'm aware, this is why I pay someone local to do my taxes, instead of using TurboTax. They pay for prep software, but it's not TurboTax (Drake something or another).
I work for free more than 20% of the year to pay for stuff that costs about 15x the price it should. The difference of the money goes to golf buddies of the Pelosi's and other corrupt politicians.
That $80b in funding will benefit literally no-one except a select few individuals.
All those new auditors will be necessary if/when de-dollarization kicks into high gear.
As dollar reserves diminish, so will the demand for US debt. The cost of new debt will be rise, possibly high enough for the US to (gasp!) actually utilize taxation to pay for its spending. In 2019, US outlays were ~30% greater than revenues. So taxes could need to rise by as much ~30% if debt becomes so expensive as to be unpalatable.
Actually, that's before accounting for the looming rise in debt servicing costs, and assuming progressives don't pass anything from their expensive wishlist. If progressives pass "medicare for all" (which would come with ~$1 Trillion in *new* government spending), we could need to increase tax revenues by >50% to cover all outlays.
So, yeah. The $80B in funding will come in very handy when it's time to raise taxes.
In an unrelated note, if you think we'll raising 2 Trillion dollars in new spending without taxing the middle class, please DM me. I'd like to talk to you about fantastic investment opportunity in Arizona's up-and-coming beach condo construction industry.
Questions: Hiring 30k over two years is alot of people. Where do these presumably qualified people come from? Are they MBA types? Finance majors? Do they take people off the street and train them? If so, how do we know these new people will be a net positive and not just administrative bloat? The article says they will hire more data scientists, but how many "data scientists" does the US pump out each year, and what does it take to convince them to work for the IRS?
I have so many questions on how the mechanics of an organizational change like this works.
I think that this new spending and new staff will be used to further weaponize the IRS against political opponents. We already saw the Obama administration use the IRS to suppress political opponents without any real consequences.
130 comments
[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 188 ms ] threadAn agent spending a day going through the returns of some random person who makes 40-60k to see that their return was off by $30 is an absolute waste of time and resources.
The IRS needs to fry the biggest fish for a change, instead of ignoring them or being too scared to face a well-funded legal team.
https://www.sba.gov/partners/contracting-officials/contract-...
The final 2017 audit rate for earners between $200,000 and $500,000 0.4%, far below the 2.3% for that bracket in 2010, according to IRS data."
https://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/roll_call_votes/vote1...
Money is fungible. This was a messaging bill. If they were serious, they'd create an independently-funded agency within the IRS with the sole mandate of going after high earners.
-----------------------------------
RE: below [due to timeout]
>The original bill already passed.
>Congress has more important things to do. >The executive has stated its position.Not really? The original bill already passed. The executive has stated its position. Congress has more important things to do.
What should be concerning is the new reporting requirements on virtually any $600 transaction combined with 30k more IRS staff.
Look at what's come out from Trump's historical tax returns -- literally tens (if not hundreds?) of millions of dollars in tax fraud that was just never prosecuted. Had the authorities looked before the statute of limitations had elapsed, there would have likely been criminal charges.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/10/02/us/politics/d...
https://www.propublica.org/article/trump-inc-podcast-never-b...
This isn't "some people say" territory - it's just blatant fraud that went unprosecuted and it happens all the time.
Once you get out of simple W2 and 1099 income things get real complicated real fast. So complicated the IRS can get it wrong themselves. The more complicated the return, the more subjective they become. When the rules are so complex or the terms so vague that things can be left up to interpretation or they do not capture all edge cases it becomes very easy to end up in a scenario where you have to prove intent to commit fraud if you really want to prosecute.
There is no doubt that the IRS leaves plenty of money on the table by not pursuing more high earners, but who wants to do the hard work when the easy work is just to compare reported W2 and 1099 income statements with returns?
If we wanted to get serious about going after high earners we would simplify the tax code. We'd get rid of certain carry overs all together. At some point we may even tax revenue instead of profits. That might sound wildly "anti-capitalist" but it's the only way to eliminate the ambiguity. We could create different incentives that reverse the burden.
I can think of a funny example I saw the other day where some dope was telling people they can deduct their dog as a business expense if they work from home because the dog is a "guard dog". The thing is you actually can do this. If you do this with any old dog it obviously would not hold up… but where is the line? How much training does a dog need to be considered a guard dog? How many hours a day is the dog actually guarding? You going to interview the dog? What if the dog dies or runs away? The IRS is not going to scrutinize every dog. There are a ridiculous amount of things just like this that people write off as expenses. If you want to successfully prosecute you've got to really make the case that it was intentional—like that there was no dog at all. Otherwise it's just difficult, and there's so much lower hanging fruit. You want to go back and forth over a dog with or just go after this person who failed to report a PayPal transaction? The latter is so much easier. Guaranteed win.
which would be easy, as an animal ought to have been registered and thus have a registration from which an easy check should've been possible.
If the tax code deems that expenses such as a guard dog is something that can be deducted, then why is the nuance relevant at all? It's a dog, and it does guarding duties during business hours. Whether it performed the guarding duties well or not is also irrelevant - the expense of a dog would be the same whether they do guarding well, or sloppily.
So the only opportunity for such fraud is if the dog didn't exist, and thus you're not really paying the expenses associated with said dog. I fail to see why having a dog and being able to expense it from your income is such a big deal.
Edit: in fact, i personally would like to see the tax code simplified, so that each human can claim _all_ expenses for living, from their income, and only ever get taxed on profits (which is money they did not consume).
Oh really?
"Credit Suisse, the collapsed Swiss bank taken over by UBS Group in a hastily arranged bailout earlier this month, may bring with it a fresh set of regulatory and legal problems for its new owner.
For years, the bank has provided a safe haven for wealthy American clients to hide assets from the IRS — even after it was caught and prosecuted for doing the same thing more than a decade ago"
Many will take whatever opportunity they can get. Whether its complex offshore structures or moving it to banks that will greet you with a wink and a nod. As long as it doesn't go to the IRS.
I'm not saying all wealthy individuals do this, or even most. But the amount of money that is intentionally hidden from the IRS is incredibly substantial. They have done the studies.
The best practices for tax planning deliberately go into the gray area, because there is money to be made in the expected case. Even if you are audited and found breaking the law, the consequences are rarely that severe. But the same reasons that make going into the gray zone profitable in tax planning also make it profitable to audit people who practice tax planning.
Just because they have receipts of their expensed 'business' dinners and 'client' trips to Disney World doesn't mean they're not fraudulent
Warren Buffet pays a smaller % of his income in tax than he secretary does, and he's said that himself. You know how that's possible? Because Buffet and people like him bought off the government ages ago and, collectively, said to the IRS "we're going to tell you what we are going to pay, and you're going to deal with it, OK?", and continually lobby congress and say that whatever minuscule amount they actually do pay is WAY too high and needs to be cut, and cut again.
You say that like it should be shocking, but I don't see why that would be the expectation.
You could easily come at it from the opposite direction and wonder why Buffet pays so much more than his secretary in dollar terms, yet they get the same police, roads, schools, and public services.
Buffett pays less in %, because he is not earning wage labour. That's not tax fraud, nor is it illegal.
Buffett specifically believes that this is bad and his taxes should be higher.
Most people know where their checkbooks are but aren't using them. What they really mean is either 1) I wan't someone else to pay taxes for X, or 2) Im willing to pay more taxes, but only if everyone else does it too.
Thats not to say either of those positions are necessarily bad, just that people aren't very honest about expressing them, or possibly with themselves.
Why is proportional comparison relevant?
It sounds like that's the plan:
"It also aims to help close the "tax gap" between taxes owed and those paid, estimated by Treasury at some $600 billion a year, by focusing new audits on the wealthiest Americans."
Hopefully we can avoid electing clowns long enough to see this bear fruit.
Note that pretty much everything the Biden administration has done amounts to soaking the middle class. $600 reporting threshold, anyone?
The only real “change” was that now Venmo/Cash App will be required to, too— and even that got delayed.
https://www.wolterskluwer.com/en/expert-insights/irs-delays-...
So it applies to digital payment methods like Paypal, to payment networks like Western Union, but also to any credit card transaction over $600?
edit: I think I was thinking of the payments in the wrong direction. The 1099-K applies primarily to the receiving party?
If people work hard and make alot of money you want them targeted? Wow! If only I could waste billions of our taxes without accountability.
Those ultra rich hire people, and have lot's of write off's and know the system. Tax code is difficult on purpose.
There is a history of IRS targeting certain groups, while ignoring the others. If you think they wont target people that are helpless and can't fight you've got to wake up.
Not too long ago: "Internal Revenue Service says it gave extra scrutiny to organizations with the names "Tea Party" or "Patriot" seeking tax-exempt status.
No criminal charges were ever filed against IRS officials.
Targeting some dopes creating a 501 as a “Tea Party” group is called targeting the low hanging fruit. So is aggressively enforcement of credits for non-custodial parents, etc.
Meanwhile, those hard working ultra-rich real estate developers committing various frauds with self-dealing, fake appraisals, etc walk away with millions of dollars and pay little or nothing.
When they investigated, "progressive" and "occupy" (as in Occupy Wall Street) were also on the scrutiny list. They were (correctly) looking for political orgs masquerading as "social welfare" orgs to avoid disclosing donors.
(Also on the list of terms: "open source software", "medical marijuana", etc.)
https://web.archive.org/web/20131207123209/https://www.bloom...
No, just the "make a lot of money" part. How hard they worked doesn't matter.
Uh, yes, that's the whole point. If you win at capitalism, you have to pay the cost to keep the whole thing going.
>Those ultra rich hire people, and have lot's of write off's and know the system. Tax code is difficult on purpose.
They also hire people to hide money for them. See: the Swiss banking system, Cayman Islands LLC structure, etc...
>If you think they wont target people that are helpless and can't fight you've got to wake up
That's what they DO do. They go after the low-hanging fruit significantly more because the poor person knows they'll get fucked if they don't do what the IRS says. The rich person will hire lawyers.
>Not too long ago: "Internal Revenue Service says it gave extra scrutiny to organizations with the names "Tea Party" or "Patriot" seeking tax-exempt status.
The Tea Party was founded by a bunch of billionaires that didn't want to pay any taxes at all. Seeing them form an organization to "donate" money to (with the express intent on using said money to "lobby" the government to reduce taxes even further) and ask for it to be tax-exempt is the peak example of everything that is wrong with unchecked capitalism.
No shit the IRS looked at them a bit closer.
One year I got a paper mail from IRS where they said that there were potentially unpaid taxes, but it could be that you haven't filed Schedule D form for RSU. I was very pleased with it - it clearly stated what I didn't do, what I should do (file needed forms), how to contact etc.
I updated everything providing what was needed and sent it, everything was ok.
Comparing to the messy interactions with tax guys that I had long time ago in my former home country (with hints of needs of bribes), when I was leaving it, I'll rather have to deal with IRS any day.
The IRS is about to have the world's largest Kanban board.
And when they do, all you can do is pay whatever amount they decide.
Ask me how I know.
You can easily run a program to detect people claiming the same dependents.
... while audits for rich folks required heavy human involvement right from the beginning, so of course the numbers are skewed such that it looks like they are targeting the middle and lower classes, if you treat both types of audit as identical.
These sorts of audits may or may not return any extra revenue.
The highest likelihood of tax fraud are people who commit small fraud that, to them, seem undetectable.
Sure you could go after a low income tax cheat, but you end up just putting them in debt if they don’t actually have the ability to pay you.
This is all about justice vs. profitability.
Should police only pull over people in luxury cars because they're more likely to be able to pay a speeding ticket?
Clear answer IMO. Similarly should the government prioritize more serious offenses over lesser? It's a bigger crime to evade $1,000,000 in taxes than it is to evade a $1,000 tax bill.
so the analogy is flawed, because you a priori assume the higher income people would perpetrate a higher amount of fraud.
> It's a bigger crime to evade $1,000,000 in taxes than it is to evade a $1,000 tax bill.
Yes, but is earning a higher income make you a higher probability of higher fraud? I don't think fraud is distributed like that. In fact, i would argue that the higher income you are, the more likely you are to use professional services for taxes, which means you are less likely to commit fraud!
Is it unfair that police patrol for speeders on the highway more than on bike paths?
yes, if the majority of the people are on bike paths, and they're the majority of all frauds.
Esp. if to drive on the highway, you are often driven by a chauffeur, who are professionals and knows exactly which section of the highway allows you to go fast without breaking the legal limits.
Therefore, patrolling the highways in lieu of bike paths means you will miss all of the small time speeders, and occasionally just catch a big speeder. I would imagine the trade off is not worth the loss in speeding tickets.
The number one priority of the IRS I should be recovering funds, not ideological Warfare.
Recovering funds should not be political, and to make it so is a race to the bottom. Once you start targeting specific groups, you normalize all kinds of bad behavior.
That would mean that lower-income people would be investigated much more frequently than a multi-billionaire. Which is currently the case - harassing a lower-income family over a $500 or $1k difference is an open-and-shut case, the lowest of the lowest hanging fruit. Going after a billionaire is much harder, more time consuming, and definitely costly, even if the potential payout is orders of magnitude higher.
If the IRS can catch 100 X $1K errors in an hour, they should do this instead of spending 100 hours to catch a 10k error.
That is to say, the top priority should be getting the most money back for the tax payer, and Not fighting a culture war that assumes poor = good person and rich = bad person.
That stuff targets old people and people like tradesmen who own their own businesses, but are kinda dumb about business. Some of the ads are fake as well, bought by dark money orgs.
Just tell me what I owe, and if I feel like it I can dispute it. If they can validate a tax return they obviously know what would be correct.
The truth is closer to yes. Yes, there could be (and is in civilized countries) a web based form that lists everything the government expects to apply this year. And it could be quite accurate. Then you spend fifteen minutes (typically) entering in your deductions or any missing data. Does the math. Reduces the manual process from a week to under an hour.
(I understand that third-party software does reduce that time as well, but shouldn't need to exist.)
So yes, it can be done, because I've done it when I had a contract in another country.
https://www.propublica.org/article/inside-turbotax-20-year-f...
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/ncna736386
So they had done my taxes and knew they owed me money and, basically, stole my money. If I owed them money they would have immediately hit me with a bill or an audit. And on top of it they wanted me to refile my taxes “correctly” after they had already done my taxes.
This “do your thing and we’ll do it, too, and we’ll see if you got it wrong” is one of the most stressful aspects of American bureaucracy.
There are a few states did well with no income tax(just sales tax and property tax), the nation could do the same, don't forget to short Intuit if this happens.
I'm all for simplifying the tax code (e.g. eliminating many deductions) as long as we also eliminate loopholes that rich people often use to avoid paying taxes on their income.
Also, how do you report how much you've spent to the IRS? That seems even harder. Some people have suggested a "prebate" of a payment that people get that helps with their first part of the sales tax, but that breaks down after a while.
There are also the same problems of "under the table" behavior.
I always hear this said about national sales taxes, but it just doesn’t really jive with me as valid. It really seems to make the assumption that consumption doesn’t actually increase based upon how wealthy you are. When it obviously does. I don’t know many poor folks buying super cars, yachts, airplanes, and multimillion dollar homes. Yet I know a few wealthy folks with multiple of each.
Best example I'm personally familiar with is the carpenter whose Corvette was a company car.
I agree that taxes shouldn't be punitive, but that's another discussion.
If you implement a nationwide sales tax of 10-15% which of these have you just put into poverty?
Take the poor family living paycheck to paycheck - they spend practically every cent they earn on the basic necessities. Whereas I find it highly doubtful that your wealthy friends are spending every single dollar they earn every year (surely they save/invest a large percentage of their earnings, right?)
The middle three quintiles would see their tax burden increase significantly. Consider that taxes are only 10 or 15% after your deduction until you get into the third quintile. The proposed sales tax would have to be 22% to be revenue neutral. If there is some sort of offset to disadvantaged households, you would need a 34% tax to sustain revenue.
So their tax burden would go up.
We don't really internalize how much more the top income brackets make and don't spend. The top 1% of Americans have about 16 times more wealth than the bottom 50%. https://www.cnbc.com/2021/06/23/how-much-wealth-top-1percent... - Their effective tax rate is going to be above 22% today, so even if they spent every last dime their taxes would go down, and as we know the wealthy are able to save more, so their tax burden will go down further still.
Most of us would need to do very little filing-related work every year if anti-tax politicians who think their crusade is worth wasting hundreds of person-lifetimes of hours every single year, and tax prep companies' lobbyists (probably with, ah, some overlap between these two causes) would stop standing in the way, no major overhaul of the tax code required.
As long as we have taxes we will need a tax collector (i.e. the IRS) to handle all the filings and to make sure people are paying their taxes.
The IRS absolutely could be doing more. They could let you log-in to a portal with your tax return prefilled out based on all the filings done by your employer. But the tax preparation industry has lobbied against this, and the IRS is underfunded (they still haven't processed all of last year's paper returns).
Also a lot of states that don't have income tax, receive lots of federal funding.... Which comes from income taxes.
Option (c) will probably never get audited and we all know it. I won't be taking it.
People wanting to deduct their charitable contributions should have to work harder to do that. I shouldn’t be inconvenienced because of that.
Of course if they did that you wouldn’t need 80K new feds, and since they tend to vote lockstep for more endless government, well it’s quite convenient isn’t it?
There is one major party that thinks government doesn’t and can’t work well, so it’s no wonder that lots of the stakeholders design systems that frustrate users.
https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu...
As opposed to the US, "Tell me what I already know, and if it doesn't match, we'll make your life hell for an indeterminate period of time."
That $80b in funding will benefit literally no-one except a select few individuals.
The alternative is that you shoulder their burden.
As dollar reserves diminish, so will the demand for US debt. The cost of new debt will be rise, possibly high enough for the US to (gasp!) actually utilize taxation to pay for its spending. In 2019, US outlays were ~30% greater than revenues. So taxes could need to rise by as much ~30% if debt becomes so expensive as to be unpalatable.
Actually, that's before accounting for the looming rise in debt servicing costs, and assuming progressives don't pass anything from their expensive wishlist. If progressives pass "medicare for all" (which would come with ~$1 Trillion in *new* government spending), we could need to increase tax revenues by >50% to cover all outlays.
So, yeah. The $80B in funding will come in very handy when it's time to raise taxes.
In an unrelated note, if you think we'll raising 2 Trillion dollars in new spending without taxing the middle class, please DM me. I'd like to talk to you about fantastic investment opportunity in Arizona's up-and-coming beach condo construction industry.
taxation is literally theft
I have so many questions on how the mechanics of an organizational change like this works.