IRS Is 48 Days Late To Issue Report Telling American Public How It'll Spend New $80 Billion
The agency’s new report tells us practically nothing of significance.

Last year, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen gave the newly-enriched IRS a February 17 deadline for releasing a report detailing how the agency would use its $80 billion cash infusion—the largest in the agency's history—over the next 10 years.
The IRS, notoriously keen on imposing deadlines on everyone else, blew past its own, finally releasing the report yesterday—48 days late, for those counting.
Unfortunately, very little information of substance was contained within.
Though it's talked a big game about improving taxpayer services (customer service will soon become "world class," the agency claims), a paltry $3.2 billion will be devoted to that line item while $45.6 billion will go toward enforcement—some men with guns, but mostly auditors tasked with closing the tax gap, which is the difference between the amount owed and the amount that actually ends up in government coffers. The IRS, as of 2021, had a little under 80,000 employees; with the new cash infusion, the agency will hire almost 9,000 additional employees to work in enforcement, with another almost 14,000 in taxpayer services by the end of FY 2025.
The report contained no details as to longer-term hiring plans or how the agency intends to be sure audits don't increase for families making under $400,000 a year (assurances not provided within the text of the funding bill, which were haggled over at great length). The agency has a poor track record on this front: Earlier this year, Reason reported that the group with the highest audit rates in 2022—more than five times everyone else—were low earners taking the earned income tax credit.
The report did, however, detail plans to hire specialists who will target high–net worth individuals and big companies, as well as estate taxes and cryptocurrencies. It will be interesting to see whether the IRS can attract such professionals, or whether high–net worth individuals will better incentivize the best and brightest to help them minimize their tax burdens.
The report amusingly asserts that the IRS is on its way to becoming "digital first"—but also that "high-priority forms" won't become available online until FY 2024/2025 at the soonest. The digitalization section is filled with vague mumbo-jumbo like "implement necessary data storage requirements and best practices to retain proof of receipt and of senders' identities," with very little actual detail as to how this will be done. For high-earners who have had their data leaked and published on ProPublica's website against their will, some more detail about both data security and personnel vetting might be comforting.
"The rise in the breadth and complexity of tax administration has outpaced the IRS's ability to effectively monitor compliance, given its limited resources," the agency reminds us toward the end of the report, hitting a "keep giving us more money" note that can be found throughout.
For once, they're kinda right: The tax code includes benefits for everyone from parents to property owners. Whether it be state and local tax deductions or mortgage interest rate deductions, all kinds of people can qualify for their special little loophole.
Critics of big government might notice that the IRS has, in fact, diagnosed the problem: As the tax code gets more complex, so too does enforcement.
But there are lots of ways of solving this problem that don't involve continually upping the amount we shell out to the IRS. And, at the very minimum, if we're going to give it billions and billions of dollars, along with the stipulation that the agency communicates where the money will go, we should expect a detailed report delivered on time.
The fact that the agency couldn't even do this doesn't bode well for its big $80 billion makeover.
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My take away: Personxs with guns will appear at your door.
Otherwise the money will disappear with no accountability for its misuse.
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The new "Biden" led, more "Efficient" IRS at work already! (sarc)
Unfortunately, the IRS couldn't find someone capable of performing an audit on the IRS.
The diversity chief has a problem with the audit using math.
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“And how we burned in the camps later, thinking: What would things have been like if every Security operative, when he went out at night to make an arrest, had been uncertain whether he would return alive and had to say good-bye to his family?” -Solzhenitsyn
Serious question: How does the GAO play into this?
Here's the actual formula: give the IRS $80 billion more. When that fails to close the tax gap, give the IRS $94 billion more, adjusted for inflation. When that fails to close the tax gap, give the IRS $109 billion more ... etc etc etc etc
The same sort of progression seems to apply to many government school systems WRT the kids' grades.
Just eliminate taxes and fund the government entirely by printing money. Deficits don't matter.
So sayeth the believers in the Magic Money Tree
No, the MMT advocates still want taxes
Mmt only works if for every dollar you print, you steal one and burn it. It is plain as day in their own equations.
they are going to hire a bunch of knuckle draggers to shake down waiters and waitresses over their (un)reported tips
The IRS should be treated for being late the way it treats the average American for being late on their taxes.
That’s OK. They just need to file an extension.
Note the joke would be the second sentence. But first Mike has to declare it is fine for dems to do this.
One gets the impression Ron DeSantis is on vacation or something.
BTW... This *extra* $80 billion is nearly double the pre-Ukraine war military budget of the state of Russia.
And it is designated to build an army directed against us.
They need more money to get reports done on time.
You already know how they are going to spend the money under Biden: persecute political opponents, harass small businesses, and audit people foolish enough to file taxes themselves.
Why make them go through the pointless exercise of pretending otherwise?
Is there any requirement that if I file on paper that my 30 pages are sorted by page number?
https://twitter.com/Cernovich/status/1643816631477633025?t=kHQE7FriNsZWaxtyft56MA&s=19
Hugely significant case that’s not getting nearly enough coverage.
This man was stopped in the streets by rioters. Had an AK-47 put in his face. He defended himself.
Police cleared him, then a Soros DA in Austin Texas personally intervened.
[Link]
Guns are bad mmmkay?
But the LARPing AK-47 brandishing faggot was none other than beloved libertarian activist Garrett Foster!
It’s ok to point a rifle at enemies of the left.
Just fine them 20 billion per day for being late - problem solved.
As the tax code gets more complex, so too does enforcement.
"BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAAA!!"
Tax arepas? Sarait might have an idea.
Maybe you aught to PAY OFF a little of your astronomical DEBT psycho's...
I had to call the IRS recently and used the specific phone number and extension listed on the website, as prompted. Amazingly I actually reached an agent after 1.5 hours who told me it was the wrong department and he would transfer me, he even said “well at least you reached someone!”. When he transferred me to the “correct department” the phone call was disconnected. 1.5 hours of time wasted for nothing. No amount of money can fix the bureaucratic mess that is the IRS.
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Make a simple progressive tax system. no loop holes. no carve outs. everyone pays equally based on their bracket, whether capital earnings or wage earnings. Simple, I just saved y'all 80 billion.
THE ONLY logical thing to do is rescind the money altogether. They failed to meet the terms. Treat them just as any other beneficiary of federal funds.
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IRS Statement: We are not sure how to spend the money, we haven't figured out how to extort money from and jail taxpayer that have legally paid all their taxes, but don't worry we will!
Wouldn't it have been better to decide what you want to do and then ask for the appropriate amount of money, rather than take the money and then decide what to do with it?