Don't Believe the White House's Promises About Who the New IRS Will Audit
Media "fact-checkers" are taking administration promises at face value and using them to bludgeon Republicans.

As the House of Representatives, as early as this afternoon, prepares to give the Internal Revenue Service the biggest single funding boost in its history, top Democrats have been busy escalating their already implausible claims that goosing the IRS enforcement budget by 69 percent over a decade, hiring 87,000 additional new staffers at an agency that currently employs 79,000, and nabbing an estimated extra $124 billion in tax revenue will miraculously not bring any percentage increase in audits performed on Americans earning less than $400,000 a year.
"Contrary to the misinformation from opponents of this legislation," Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen wrote in a letter to IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig Wednesday, "small business or households earning $400,000 per year or less will not see an increase in the chances that they are audited." Rettig had echoed the language of his boss in a letter of attempted reassurance to the Senate on August 4, albeit with more wiggle room (italicized):
"These resources are absolutely not about increasing audit scrutiny on small businesses or middle-income Americans. As we've been planning, our investment of these enforcement resources is designed around the Department of the Treasury's directive that audit rates will not rise relative to recent years for households making under $400,000."
As Yellen's more assertive guarantee—reiterated for emphasis by the White House press shop Thursday—indicated, the Biden administration is getting a bit jumpy about criticism that a reenergized IRS will make life more unpleasant for the voting non-rich.
Asked repeatedly about the enforcement boost Tuesday, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre insisted that "it will only apply to those earning over $400,000," that "this is not about folks who make less than $400,000," and that the answer to whether there will be new audits on anybody making less than that was: "No. Very clear, no."
As Liz Wolfe has reported repeatedly in the pages of Reason, none of these assurances live in the text of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) itself. One Republican amendment "to prevent the use of additional Internal Revenue Service Funds from being used for audits of taxpayers with taxable incomes below $400,000" was voted down on party lines. You'll just have to take Democrats' word for it.
That's good enough for many news organizations, who have been coughing up "fact-checks" aimed not at the demonstrable veracity of White House promises about significant legislation impacting literally all adult Americans but at the hyperbole of Republican criticism thereof.
"The Treasury says it will hire experienced auditors and workers who will improve taxpayer services, and that audit rates for those earning less than $400,000 are not expected to rise in relation to historic norms," the Associated Press relayed in one such exercise Wednesday.
Abetted by a willing media, the executive branch has gone on the offensive against people who are more credulous about such claims. "It is wholly inaccurate to describe any of these resources as being about increasing audit scrutiny of the middle class or small businesses," Natasha Sarin, a Treasury Department tax policy specialist, told Time magazine in a particularly loaded fact-check Tuesday.
Not content with hard-to-believe vows that audits on the non-rich won't increase, the Treasury Department went the extra mile this week and floated the absurd notion of a decline. From a CBS News piece Thursday:
Households earning less than $400,000 "will likely see the chance of an audit decline," Treasury said in a statement. "Instead, new funding will crack down on tax evaders among the wealthy and large corporations, invest in technology upgrades that help taxpayers, and hire more customer support staff to prevent backlogs."
If we take Yellen at her word that "households earning $400,000 per year or less will not see an increase in the chances that they are audited," what would that look like numerically? According to a Government Accountability Office report released in May, in the 2019 tax year (the last for which complete data was available), there were 147,252,000 tax returns filed by people earning $200,000 or less, 359,000 of which got audited. That's around one out of every 400.
There are at least three good reasons to suspect that, despite this week's aggressive official insistence to the contrary, the rate of IRS audits performed on the under-$400,000s will be higher than one out of every 400.
1) The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) predicts so. In a September 2021 letter, CBO Director Phillip L. Swagel estimated that boosting IRS funding by $80 billion would increase tax revenues by $200 billion (the number would later rise to $207 billion, before settling at $204 billion), adding that "the proposal…would return audit rates to the levels of about 10 years ago; the rate would rise for all taxpayers" (italics mine), though "higher-income taxpayers would face the largest increase."
This remains the CBO prediction, which otherwise Democrats are happy to tout for the $204 billion revenue increase and $124 billion net reduction to the deficit ($204 billion minus the $80 billion cost). Some news organizations have confused those two different numbers for being two different scores, using the delta to dampen criticism that audit rates will rise for everyone. For instance, PolitiFact this week:
[Rep. Kevin] Brady [R–Texas]…failed to note a key difference between the CBO assessment from a year ago and the bill under consideration today. The CBO assumed in its report that $60 billion of the $80 billion would go toward enforcement. But the current bill would result in substantially less than that—$46 billion—for enforcement, according to a Congressional Research Service analysis. With nearly a third less money, the number of resulting audits likely would also be less than one would expect based on the CBO report.
This description misstates what Swagel said. The CBO did not assume that $60 billion of the $80 billion increase "would go toward enforcement," it assumed that "about $60 billion would be for enforcement and related operations support." (Italics mine.) In the final IRA bill, in fact, $45.7 billion is earmarked for "enforcement," and $25.3 billion goes to "operations support." There is no reason to conclude from those dollar amounts that the number of resulting audits will be less than originally projected.
In a statement to Washington Post fact-checker Glenn Kessler, who is consistently the best in his fallen field, the CBO tried to de-emphasize Swagel's audit numbers:
"The statement about the effect on taxpayers in the September 2021 blog post was intended to place the magnitude of the funding change into context rather than as guidance as to how one might predict a count of audits," the CBO said, adding that it has not "provided an estimate of the number of audits that might result from providing additional resources to the IRS since such an estimate would be very sensitive to exactly how IRS utilized the additional funding."
Given the consistency of the CBO's revenue estimate over time, however, it's hard to imagine the agency's original assumptions changing much. Kessler, for what it's worth, concluded that the GOP's "math adds up" when it comes to the increase in audits at various income levels, just that "these numbers lack important context."
2) The "tax gap" that the IRS seeks to close includes large amounts from the under-$400,000 club. The Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT), the bipartisan congressional body that reports on the distributional effects of taxation, calculated one year ago that $68 billion of the estimated $245 billion annual in underreported individual income tax revenue between 2011 and 2013 originated from sole proprietor businesses that report to the IRS using Schedule C.
"More than half of the assessed amounts are estimated to come from taxpayers with reported income between zero and $50,000," the JCT found.
More controversially, in a July 29 assessment, the JCT estimated that those earning less than $200,000 per year will see a combined tax increase in 2023 of $16.7 billion, which flies in the face of the Biden administration's repeated promises to the contrary. But the White House counters that the JCT figures don't account for cost-savings that the middle class will enjoy thanks to the Inflation Reduction Act.
The fact remains that you can't close the tax gap without greater enforcement on the poor and that enforcement on the poor is considerably less expensive. This helps explain why the auditing rates of different income levels tend to look like a barbell—bigger at each end, thinner through the broad middle.
It is true that Yellen has freshly directed the IRS to not increase the audit rate of under-$400,000s. And it's also true that there's no structural enforcement mechanism preventing the agency from continuing to go after low-hanging fruit to meet revenue targets. Or, in the memorable words of PolitiFact, "There's no guarantee that the agency will adhere to the new policy it has announced, but there's no guarantee that it won't."
3) The Biden administration keeps wiggling when confronted with criticism about beefed-up enforcement. Reading the White House and Treasury Department respond to worries over increased audits, you'd think that much of the $80 billion was going toward customer service.
"We are the greatest country in the world, yet the agency that touches more Americans than any other continually struggles to receive sufficient resources to fulfill its important mission," lamented IRS Commissioner Rettig in his questionably worded letter to the Senate. "The resources in the reconciliation package will get us back to historical norms in areas of challenge for the agency—large corporate and global high-net-worth taxpayers—as well as new areas like pass-through entities and multinational taxpayers with international tax issues, where we need sophisticated, specialized teams in place that are able to unpack complex structures and identify noncompliance…. Other resources will be invested in employees and IT systems that will allow us to better serve all taxpayers, including small businesses and middle-income taxpayers."
In fact, just $3.2 billion of the $80 billion is earmarked for customer service, producing a mere 9 percent increase over the previous baseline. If the agency is bad at answering phone calls—and it's bad at answering phone calls—a 9 percent bump seems inadequate to the task.
The agency has tried gamely to make the 87,000 hiring number seem less scary, insisting (as the White House did Thursday) that "the IRS would need to hire 52,000 people over the next six years just to maintain current staffing level to replace those who retire or otherwise leave." An employee attrition rate of two-thirds over just six years seems a tad on the exaggerated side.
Running away from the plain fact that the bulk of this money is being spent on boosting enforcement and that the goal is to squeeze an extra $48 billion a year from American taxpayers amounts to a panicky acknowledgment that one of Democrats' main funding mechanisms for their ambitious domestic agenda is inherently unpopular. Luckily for them, the question will lose its escalatory urgency as soon as this afternoon. Unluckily for the rest of us, that's when the squeeze is almost certain to begin.
BONUS LINK: Hear me jabber about taxes on The Reason Rundown With Peter Suderman.
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The conversation is always about growing it bigger rather than actually making it efficient. I heard another journalist, Kevin Williamson, talk about how he went and did the math and we already have more tax agents per-capita than other major countries such as Switzerland and France, etc. I think the ratio was 2x for us.
I think that's indicative of a broken agency, and throwing more manpower at something that wrong is not the solution and will probably convolute things further.
I have read many reports that taxes in the UK, for instance, are simpler than the US, which sounds plausible from my US experience. I would not be surprised if most EU countries are simpler. I wouldn't even be surprised if most people just pay a tax bill from the government without question. The 1% probably have special cases, but not most workers.
Yes, and we actually can see that the Republicans have attempted tax code simplification a few times. Say what one wishes about them, this is something they've gone to bat on several times. Ryan did is a few times himself, and it's a true fight against hard, entrenched interests.
The SALT Deduction is my favorite huge fight that really highlights an actual political division along partisan lines.
I digress. Yeah, I really think that so much of government is due for massive simplification and efficiency work. We always get into arguments about how big government is. I'm sympathetic to this because I truly, truly hate big government and think it's a problem on practical and moral dimensions. Less commonly do we get into discussion of actually getting the government to do the work it is claiming ownership of.
The IRS is a great example of this. I have my own stories about trying to deal with them in good faith and how atrocious the process is. I have since discovered almost everyone has their own story along the same lines of attempting to deal with the IRS.
I have extremely high doubt that more people is the solution. This is a fundamental issue of complexity and bloat.
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In the UK they also pay VAT (value added taxes) which piles on taxes at each stage of the production of goods. And I understand that the subsequent taxes on each item are based on a percentage that includes the previous taxes.
I like how your tax return here is taxable income.
The interest free loan you gave the government is taxable. Lovely.
That's called 1040EZ here.
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UK Here, yes, taxes are taken at source, you basically get a paycheck less taxes, and as the fiscal year goes one, taxes are adjusted if necessary through the year to ensure it all gets collected. So if you get a bonus, you might see an increase in the monthly taxes deducted for the remainder of the tax year.
It may be simpler but its also a fucking rip off.
A couple making £30K a year with 2 kids can take home about £6-7k more than a couple with a single earner who works and earns £60k. Having lived and worked in the US, the tax system is so much better and fairer over there.
Once you earn more than £50K (which is the start of the top (40%) tax bracket), they start taking away tax deductions.
The principle that you have a number of dependents, therefore you get to deduct so much per dependent based on thats how much it costs to provide for them goes out the window after £50K
Sharing spousals deductions goes out the window after £50K.
Child tax credit is phased out the window between £50 and £60K.
Most people don't file tax returns, but if you claim Child Benefit and are in the 40% tax bracket, you have to file.
One good thing, you can file online through the inland revenue for free, and most of the data is already put in for you, you just need to confirm it.
Many countries have large VATs and withhold everything from employees, so few taxpayers have any responsibility or legal liability at all.
That is why the IRS refers to the US system of taxation as "voluntary"--taxpayers must themselves determine and pay the taxes that the government claims they owe. Or else, of course.
The point isn't to make tax collection more efficient, the point is to punish the regime's political enemies. If that means raising an(other) army of bureaucrats, then so be it.
Are you referring to the audits of James Comey and Andrew McCabe?
glad they got to taste their own "process is the punishment" medicine
I'm still shocked that there are people who believe any statement from the White House about anything at all. Do those people actually exist? Does it have to be explained that you shouldn't believe the White House on anything they say. Psaki was bad, but the current one doesn't even have the intelligence to lie efficiently. Talk about being promoted upward due to incompetence.
You may have the "correct" resume, but if you are so incompetent and ignorant in regards to subject matter, that no one will hire you for any other position, you become the White House press secretary, simply because you check all the correct boxes.
If we have more agenda per capital than even socialist controlled capitalist countries, how can we say we are a representative democracy. This is taxation without representation. We don’t elect IRS agents. They seek them on us. This country went to war over being heavily taxed. Think it can’t happen again? Why do you think they are trying to disarm us?
I am in favor of rooting out the tax cheats.
Why aren't you?
"An unjust law is no law."—Thoma Aquinas
I am in favor of reducing government bloat and waste instead of enabling it.
Why aren’t you?
Fuck off, slaver. Taxation is theft.
-jcr
Most tax "cheats" are employed in the underground/informal economy, or depend mostly on tips. Because of their shear numbers, that's where the money is. Although it might be nice to see how their voting would be affected by tax persecution, do you really want to send government agents after exotic dancers, nannies, handymen, and high end waiters?
Apparently we need them, with nasties like Trump taking Russian money and thinking it's his. Those Scottish golf courses did not pay for themselves, and they lose money.
Any thoughts on Biden taking Ukrainian money thru Hunter?
I mean, Ukraine has certainly received outsized benefits from their dealings.
You aren't really serious, are you?
It's a big "tell" when you find people who still believe the Russia/Trump collusion Clinton criminal conspiracy. The fact that the DOJ/FBI participated in that crime should make people doubt anything they do or say. But, for some reason, those that fell for the political scam, refuse to admit they did so.
Trump's original crime, for which he will never be forgiven, is beating Hillary in 2016. For that, he must be destroyed. And, if his supporters have to be destroyed along with him, they have no problems in doing so.
I forget who it was that said "It's easier to fool someone than to convince them that they have been fooled."
-jcr
Big Government?
Who puts the police between my wife and he doctor?
God' Own Prohibitionists?
We need a more efficient IRS like we need more efficient "stop & steal" asset forfeiture or eminent domain "condemn & confiscate".
If more "convolutes" then I say: "Convolute away".
Or, we could "Just say No! to coercive govt." A voluntary, non-violent politics is yet to be tried anywhere, but is common in the private production of wealth economy. So, what's it going to be?
Continued voting for coercive chaos, or voluntary cooperative order?
How defeatist! Increasing the enforcement budget with more tax and dry agents to force people to not drink completely did away with President Hoover's prohibition enforcement problem. Hiring more narcs and tax agents to force people to not cop buzzes absolutely solved President Holy War Bush's drug prohibition problem. Unleashing Positive Christian looter cops with complete immunity and total real asset forfeiture powers ended dope enforcement problems for G. Waffen Bush, and the economy to boot.
What this legislation will do is guarantee 87,000 more democratic voters.
Probably dead on, right there.
Though in a better world, one could hope the new IRS pressure on working schlubs creates a few 100,000 republicans, or something. But of course, that sort of hopium is based on the Republican Party actually being a true opposition party that might actually do something. And that dynamic has yet to be fully ascertained.
Many of whom will live in purple Virginia.
And 87,000 more federal union members paying into Democrat PAC coffers and spending hundreds of thousands of paid hours in "union support" efforts.
"1,421 IRS and other Treasury Department employees spent 353,820 hours of taxpayer-funded union time (TFUT) in 2019. About 80 percent of all Treasury employees are employed by the IRS, so the vast majority of employees using TFUT would have been IRS workers.
"The compensation costs for this time were $17.27 million. Individuals on TFUT may also freely use government property, a cost amounting to $2.5 million. The $2.5 million cost represents the value of the free or discounted use of government property the agency has provided to the labor organization, and the expenses the agency paid in relation to activities conducted on TFUT (such as travel or per diems).
"These employees are conducting work for the National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU), which dedicates 97 percent of its political spending to Democrats. Taxpayers are essentially funding these efforts.
LOL — This enormous boost to the IRS might be the most perfect illustration of OBL's First Law yet. 🙂
Democratic economic messaging: "We're the party of the middle class and poor! Vote for us if you want to spite 1%-ers and drink billionaire tears!"
Democratic economic reality: The IRS gets more power to harass middle class families while Charles Koch is on track to make about $14,000,000,000 this year.
#LibertariansForBiden
I wonder how much Koch would have made this year without Biden's puppeteers driving oil and gas prices through the roof?
-jcr
There are plenty of auditors in the private sector. Companies hire outside firms to perform 3rd-party audits on a regular basis.
The tricky thing is, it's unlikely that many experienced, competent auditors will trade their ability to be highly compensated in the private sector for the security that comes with a government job. That means you get the lazy, unmotivated, inexperienced, or incompetent ones, largely.
In law school, it was suggested to those of us with a financial background (all both of us) that we go work for the IRS for 5-10 years, then after that depart for private sector tax law firms and make fat bank.
The big 4 are losing auditors really hard right now. Many of the offices are extremely short staffed and are increasing wages significantly to hold on to what they have.
Auditors, especially good ones, are in short supply and command outsized wages in this economy. And good auditors never work for the IRS.
Will they audit EITC fraud? Needed, but goes against Biden's claims.
Accounting Today:
The Internal Revenue Service estimates that 25.06 percent of Earned Income Tax Credit payments (translating to about $18.4 billion) were issued improperly in fiscal year 2018.
But refundable tax credits like the EITC still aren’t being classified and reported properly by the Internal Revenue Service as a high risk for improper payments, according to a new government report.
The report, from the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, noted that the federal Office of Management and Budget has declared the EITC a high-risk program that’s subject to specific reporting requirements by the Treasury Department.
All those unemployed, and experienced auditors, are living on the streets of San Franciso, or Baltimore. They just have to stay upright long enough to push the button that says "send the armed agents" to the taxpayer's home. The machine will take care of the rest.
I miss Jen Psaki. She could lie without reading it from a crib sheet.
But only after circling back.
You could cut the last 60% off the headline and it would still be true (and work for most occasions).
Media "fact-checkers" are taking administration promises at face value and using them to bludgeon Republicans.
Media organizations were doing this before the internet.
Anyone old enough to remember FAIR (Fairness and Accuracy In Reporting) will remember that their schtick is they would simply find any left-leaning source that would say, "Nuh uh" to anything Republicans said was considered a thorough debunking.
Since we already know Joe Biden is comfortable calling a 8.5% increase a 0% increase, I wouldn't trust him not to claim that people making $40,000 per year are making over $400.000 per year or that a 500% increase in audits for the middle class is in keeping with historical norms.
He's using the European system of numerical commas, you see, so $400,000 is equal to $400.00.
Time to trash the IRS, the tax code and instituted flat or fair tax off the top or something similar to Hong Kong's tiny (in comparison to our) tax code and put in term limits and a balanced budget with reasoned exceptions that make sense to ordinary people.
So, when they say $400K, is that $400K in 2022 dollars or $400K after however many years of 8-9% inflation?
Peak trans:
It’s not uncommon for nonbinary people to use gendered pronouns or interchange pronouns: Singer Janelle Monae recently came out as nonbinary and said they would continue to use “she” pronouns in addition to “they.”
But if you mistakenly use gendered pronouns to refer to a trans person who uses ungendered pronouns, you're committing violence and want to genocide them. It's okay for trans people to be wishy-washy, but you have to be up to the second on the rules.
Hmmm I'm pretty sure her pronoun is cunt
Guess she wasn't getting enough attention.
-jcr
Better pronoun: retard.
Translation: This wasn't the marketing boost I hoped it would be.
Lovato now uses both “they” and “she” pronouns, according to her Instagram account.
Zero shits given. Sticking with who/whom pronouns.
Your link to Glenn Kessler was very informative--more so than your own piece. Among other things, most of the 87,000 new hires would simply go to replace retiring IRS employees, boosting IRS staff by 26%, returning it to where it was 10 years ago, before Republicans started cutting it, rather than more than doubling it, as you imply. I read Reason, a lot, but this was below your usual standard, Matt.
If you read reason alot you know Mat doesn't have standards
I think we all agree that govt's answer to inefficiency is always to get bigger. With that said, Alan is correct. Do better.
For some reason, this essay/speech comes t mind:
Author Daniel Quinn:
In general (it can be said with reasonable justification) natural selection works on this principle, “If it doesn’t work, do it LESS.” Any gene that works against reproductive success tends to be eliminated from the gene pool–is found less and less in the gene pool until it finally disappears. Doing less of what doesn’t work is a principle that is practically instinctive to the human designer. But when it comes to our social organizations, the people of our culture follow a very different principle:
If it doesn’t work, do it MORE.
I almost always get a laugh with this statement. I’m not sure whether it’s the shock of recognition or if people just think I’m kidding. I’m certainly not kidding. The principle is best seen at work in the institutions dedicated to maintaining the stability of our structures and systems. It’s an anti-evolutionary principle, a principle that keeps anything new from happening. Here are some examples.
If spending a billion dollars doesn’t win the war on drugs, spend two billion. If spending two billion doesn’t work, spend four. Sound familiar?
If hiring a thousand cops doesn’t stop crime in your city, hire 2000. If hiring 2000 doesn’t work, hire 4000.
If sentencing criminals to 10 years doesn’t work, sentence them to 20 years. If 20 years doesn’t work, sentence them to 50–to 500, a thousand!
If building a thousand prisons doesn’t work, build 2000. If building 2000 doesn’t work, build 4000.
If assigning two hours of homework doesn’t work, assign three. If assigning three doesn’t work, assign four.
I became aware of this principle when I was the head of the mathematics department at the Encyclopaedia Britannica Educational Corporation. Someone gave me a white paper that had been put together by the National Association of Teachers of English examining the state of teaching and objectives for the future. In spite of all the themes we give them to write, they said, kids aren’t learning to how to write. So what we have to do is–guess what?–give them MORE THEMES to write. Writing 20 themes a year doesn’t work, so give them 30. And if 30 doesn’t work, give them 40.
If you’re taxpayers, you’ve seen your tax bills for education escalate steadily, year after year, decade after decade, as every year the schools struggle to do more of what doesn’t work. Everyone connected to the system is completely convinced that if spending nine trillion doesn’t work, then you just need to spend ten.
Naturally there were counselors at Columbine High School. But after the massacre, Janet Reno stood up and said, guess what, that we need to push for MORE COUNSELORS. Having counselors didn’t work, so NATURALLY we should have MORE of them, and if one for every hundred kids doesn’t work, then we should have two, and if two doesn’t work, then we should have three.
This Dem talking point was already debunked today, keep up.
I truly can't believe that in this day and age anyone takes a politician or government official at their word, especially journalists who are supposedly never to do such a thing.
Personal bias is very hard to overcome, even when it is your job to do so.
The leadership and spokesholes who are supporting this are not doing so because they simply want more money from the rich.
They want to use this to target their political enemies, who are White male conservatives.
Similar with gun control.
The rank-and-file support stricter gun control laws because they fear the street thug and the gangbanger; sadly and tragically, too many of them have compelling reasons to fear the street thug and the gangbanger.
The leadership and spokesholes push for stricter gun control to use as a tool against White male conservatives.
Note to foreign readers: Above are assertions, as opposed to actual arguments described by Robert Anton Wilson.
Why would I believe anything coming from the White House in the first place?
-jcr
Gosh, the editors at Reason sure are upset about the deal to increase tax enforcement. I wonder why? I can't imagine it has anything to do with a teensy-weensy little corporate minimum tax or excise tax on stock buybacks, could it?
Listen - no one needs to worry about being audited and paying more tax to the IRS, as long as they properly report and pay the taxes that they owe. Right? Like, what is the problem, here? That more people making less than $400k a year might be obliged to pay what they actually owe under the law? Are we supposed to be shedding any tears for them?
The problem under our existing system is that people in the lower income rungs get audited more than they rightfully should be. That is the direct result of underfunding the IRS - fewer staff members, with fewer resources, focus on the multiple small "wins" rather than investing a lot of time going after a single, big "win." Remove that structural impediment, and the enforcement will become more fair, not less.
I mean, Jesus. I pay a shitload of taxes, and I pay every dime that I owe, because my finances are shamefully simple and I don't qualify for any of the most common deductions. I'm not shedding a tear for the "small business owners" who are worried the IRS might ask them to produce their shoebox of receipts. Get a fucking accountant.
found the Edomite Pharisee
My family occasionally has attracted state and IRS auditor attention, and occasionally we have spent much time (and sometimes money) justifying our filings. We always win, but the process is irritating -- not least because we don't cheat.
The IRS can add as many agents as it likes: My dad was a tax expert and didn't like "revenuers," but he hated cheaters more. I was raised well.
The problem is not that upper middle-class people like me are getting away with not paying their taxes. It is that the system makes it so easy for so many people to work off the books.
If the government were smaller, it might be more efficient and require fewer public employees and lower taxes. Just possibly, that might be better for all of us.
"Listen - no one needs to worry about being audited and paying more tax to the IRS, as long as they properly report and pay the taxes that they owe."
Well, I've been audited twice in recent years, despite having paid all the taxes I owed. Both times resolved in my favor with zero additional taxes being owed.
The first was due to a record-keeping error on my wife's employer's part, where they had been collecting state taxes based on the wrong state. Which we pointed out to them and they corrected. But then their W2 reports to the IRS ended up being duplicative--that is, when they corrected her W2 reporting for the time they had her in the wrong state, they *also* reported the correct state on another W2 report. So basically, they reported the wages she made for first 3 months she worked there to the IRS twice, wrongfully giving the appearance of increased income.
Fortunately I had good records and the statements from here employer that the error was clerical on their part and that they had not, in fact, paid her twice, and that the 2nd W2 should have been marked as a correction. Still took months, but I got that prized letter from the IRS stating that I was right, had paid all taxes owed, and the matter was closed.
A year later, I got another audit notice, claiming that we had not paid some amount of FICA taxes and the capital gains surcharge on the FICA taxes. That turned out to be the FICA taxes on the false duplicative wages that were the subject of the first audit. I send the IRS all the documentation from the first audit, with their closure notice, and pointed out that the FICA taxes and surcharges they were claiming is exactly the amount of FICA taxes and surcharges that would be warranted for the duplicative reported income, which the first audit had already demonstrated was incorrect. Months later, I got a second letter acknowledging my claims and closing the issue.
I didn't "fear" an audit, because I knew I had paid every penny I owed. Nevertheless, I was audited--twice--and spent a considerable amount of time on the issues.
The notion that only tax cheats get audited is wrong. It is a fully rational expectation that the IRS would end up auditing large numbers of people whose returns are out-of-the-ordinary, raising questions, but which are on further review (audit) perfectly fine and paid in full.
"I didn't "fear" an audit, because I knew I had paid"
You have an irrational belief that government enforcers never make mistakes and never seriously hurt innocent people.
EVERYONE targetted by an enforcement agency is at risk, regardless of what they may or may not have done.
Do we need to allow cops to search our premises whenever they want to prove we aren't doing anything bad?
"no one needs to worry about being audited and paying more tax to the IRS, as long as they properly report and pay the taxes that they owe. Right?"
Wrong. Where are you posting from? Fantasyland?
The tax code is highly subjective, and as unintelligible even to the IRS as it is to your accountant. Enforcers are human--they do make mistakes. The IRS will ignore any invoice you send them for the unnecessary expenses they impose. The IRS will not publish a letter of apology in your local paper for having publicly shamed you. Despite their claims of being underfunded, Once you are targetted, the IRS has effectively unlimitted resources for your case. Pray it isn't marked as a political example-setting case.
They have not, historically, acted much like the KGB, but whenever ANY government enforcer targets you, you are a fool to not recognize you've just been shoved into a minefield, of potentially Kafkaesque proportions.
Leftists are not people.
There are no rules, only weapons.
They are soulless, unclean things. At least metaphorically.
No rules, only ostensible outcomes.
The most reassuring thing I have read is that the federal agencies don’t have the capacity to actually onboard that many agents.
That is what I have been saying....can you imagine the manpower they need to bring in 87,000 new employees?
And where would they find that many qualified agents, anyway? Especially agents of color, agents of the proper distribution of gender, gender identities, and sexual preferences?
Why would anyone believe anything said by any government, ever?
'Asked repeatedly about the enforcement boost Tuesday, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre insisted that "it will only apply to those earning over $400,000," that "this is not about folks who make less than $400,000," and that the answer to whether there will be new audits on anybody making less than that was: "No. Very clear, no."'
What the house dinger spokes-model did not say is that for most middle and lower tier earners there does not have to be an audit, just a judgement and bill for more taxes and penalties.
If that's the case, why did they reject the amendment that made this very clear?
"Alex, I'll take 'Questions the press will never ask' for at thousand"
So they're still not going to tackle the rampant and widely acknowledged fraud related to the EITC?
they mean they are going to target every business with a revenue of 400,000 or less.
The most important question…why would you intentionally want your hair to look like one of those plastic scrubbies you’d use on nonstick pans?
We need more Mexican tax auditors.
The second biggest lie: "Don't worry about our tax policy. We won't rob you, just the other guy, and spend some of our loot on you."
Then the reality hits. And we are reminded that "There is no honor among thieves". But, the robbery comes with the coercion of govt. that is implied when voting for rulers who are thereby authorized to initiate force, threaten, defraud. It's only logical, if superstitious self enslavement.
Anyone who will steal with you will steal from you.
Or we could simplify the tax code and only audit congress. That’s where the real money is!
The fact that they are tying an income level to their selling points should tell you it is complete BS. There are tons of people who make over $400K a year who get a W-2, 1099-INT, 1099-DIV, 1099-B, and a 1098 for their house mortgage. Everything they do is reported to the IRS before hand and they easily can do their taxes using TurboTax in about 30 minutes. Auditing them just because they make more than some arbitrary number is a waste of time and results in a windfall of $0.
What is really going to happen is they are going to purchase an AI from somewhere and have it attached to every database possible so it can figure out who is probably lying. You work in the cash economy where you get none of the forms I mentioned above, claim you are making $30K/year (no-W2), get some of the governments largesse (food stamps, etc) but your lifestyle is equal to someone making $100k/year, they going to be looking for you.
FTFY
Mar-a-Lago Gate will cost the democrats dearly in mid terms and the impeachment will begin.
Don't Believe the White House's Lies
Reason, call them what they are, quit sugar coating Biden.
Yep. Fact-checking Republican criticism of this provision has essentially amounted to "Democrats claim otherwise, therefore Republicans are lying."
It makes you wonder why people choose to become fact-checkers in the first place.
So is the idea here to disabuse me of my notion that drooling, senile politicians (and their jackbooted minions) who haughtily take things that aren't theirs, nevertheless tell the truth? If so, please consider it done.
Problem with your post is that those politicians (old and young) aren't telling the truth.
Any truth coming out of that mouthpiece is purely accidental.