Business IRS Drops Hint on Massive Audit Efforts - The tax gap is now 680 billion , people too broke to pay but they will shake them down anyway

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The tax gap—the difference between what is owed and paid to the government—widened to $688 billion in tax year 2021, which the IRS claims “underscores the importance” of the need for increased compliance.

For tax year 2020, the IRS estimates the gap to be $601 billion. For 2021, it is estimated to be $688 billion, which is “a significant jump” from previous estimates, according to an Oct. 12 news release. The 2021 tax gap is $192 billion more than estimates from 2014-16 and $138 billion more than 2017-19.
This is the first time the IRS is making tax gas projections on an annual basis. Previously, the number was published once every three years. Moving forward, the IRS plans to publish the data yearly.

As the 2020 and 2021 tax gap numbers are estimates, they can be revised up or down at a later time.

“This increase in the tax gap underscores the importance of increased IRS compliance efforts on key areas,” said IRS Commissioner Danny Werfel. “With the help of Inflation Reduction Act funding, we are adding focus and resources to areas of compliance concern, including high-income and high-wealth individuals, partnerships, and corporations.”

“These steps are urgent in many ways, including adding more fairness to the tax system, protecting those who pay their taxes, and working to combat the tax gap.”

While the IRS focuses on boosting its compliance rate and closing the tax gap, there are concerns that such efforts could affect smaller businesses and low and middle-income households.

Last month, the agency announced that it was looking to fill more than 3,700 positions nationally to assist with “expanded enforcement work” focusing on complex partnerships, large corporations, and high-income earners.
IRS commissioner Mr. Werfel said that the new employees at the agency would not target individuals and entities making less than $400,000 annually.

However, such claims fall flat given that a recent report by the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA), an IRS watchdog, pointed out that the agency does not have a “unified or updated” definition of high-income taxpayers.

“The high-income terminology is being used loosely inside the IRS with no common understanding of what the term means,” the watchdog said while pointing out that the agency “still uses $200,000 as the default high-income threshold.”

An annual income of $200,000 is “no longer a reasonable standard for high earners given inflation since 2005,” the TIGTA report stated.

In a May 16 testimony before the Senate Finance Committee, Chris Edwards of the CATO Institute said that the IRS intends to assess the income of businesses without accounting for losses.


Increased audits would likely affect “mainly small to midsize businesses, who actually may have [adjusted gross income] under 400,000.”

IRS’ Compliance Efforts​

The $688 billion tax gap for 2021 is the “gross” tax gap. An additional $63 billion in revenues is expected from IRS enforcement efforts and taxpayers’ late payments, which would result in a “net” tax gap of $625 billion.
According to the agency, the voluntary compliance rate (VCR) of tax filers “remains relatively steady.” VCR measures the share of taxes paid voluntarily and corresponds to the “gross” tax gap. The net compliance rate (NCR) measures the share of taxes that are ultimately paid, corresponding to the “net” tax gap.

“The voluntary compliance rate of the U.S. tax system is vitally important for the nation. A one-percentage-point increase in voluntary compliance would bring in about $46 billion in additional tax receipts,” according to the agency.

For tax years 2020 and 2021, the VCR is estimated to be around 85 percent. Adding in IRS’ compliance efforts, this number comes to 86.3 percent for 2021, which is close to the 87 percent rate for tax years 2014-16.

The IRS attributes the slight dip in compliance rates to “changes in the types of income and how that income is reported.” The agency plans to take a “variety of steps” to boost VCR, including improving taxpayer services.

As part of its increased compliance efforts, the IRS announced in July that it was going after “high-income individuals evading taxes.”

“The IRS is working to ensure [that] high-income filers pay the taxes they owe,” the agency said on July 14. “In recent months, our Criminal Investigation team has closed a lengthy list of cases where wealthy taxpayers have been sentenced for tax evasion, money laundering, and filing false tax returns.”

At the time, the IRS stated that it had closed 175 delinquent tax cases for millionaires in the previous months. The agency received $38 million from delinquency cases against wealthy taxpayers.

In August, the IRS said it intends to go after “large, complex partnerships” as part of making business entities pay the tax they owe. Partnerships allow businesses to pass their incomes and losses to their partners, thus avoiding getting taxed as corporations.
As the IRS has not defined what a “large, complex partnership” means, such business structures have risen in popularity.

A report by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) found that only 54 large partnerships out of the more than 20,000 registered ones were audited by the IRS in 2019. This translated into an audit rate of just 0.27 percent, which is below the audit rate for people making $25,000 per year or less.

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In August, the IRS said it intends to go after “large, complex partnerships” as part of making business entities pay the tax they owe. Partnerships allow businesses to pass their incomes and losses to their partners, thus avoiding getting taxed as corporations.
As the IRS has not defined what a “large, complex partnership” means, such business structures have risen in popularity.
Sounds like cover for making the IRS a welfare job for low intelligence unskilled labor who has no attachment to community or country.

Hmmmmmmmmmmmm...Thankfully they can find plenty of them recently.
 
What's wrong? Not enough to give to Ukraine? 100% of IRS employees should hang themselves.
 
Sounds like cover for making the IRS a welfare job for low intelligence unskilled labor who has no attachment to community or country.

Hmmmmmmmmmmmm...Thankfully they can find plenty of them recently.
And here you thought all you had to do to keep those racist government drones out of your life and finances was stay off unemployment and welfare.

Surprise Motherfucker!
 
How do they know what the tax gap is if they haven't audited these taxpayers? It's probably some kind of simple formula like multiplying GDP by tax rates and comparing it to collections. So it might not even exist.

IRS commissioner Mr. Werfel said that the new employees at the agency would not target individuals and entities making less than $400,000 annually.
Just like the AMT was never going to impact middle-class taxpayers. If you believe this you deserve to be executed.
 
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TAX COLLECTOR (n): A rat-looking guy with a couple of goons (occasionally just a rat-looking goon) who knocks on poor people's doors and demands they put all their coins in his sack. Well-known for laughing at the phrases "But you were here last week!" and "I need to feed my family!"

While this is a stock archetype of Robin Hood and other similar settings, the IRS is endeavoring to bring about a modern revival.
 
At the time, the IRS stated that it had closed 175 delinquent tax cases for millionaires in the previous months. The agency received $38 million from delinquency cases against wealthy taxpayers.
First off, virtually every Boomer is a "millionaire". If you grew up middle class, chances are great your parents are millionaires.

Secondly, the above works out to $217k per "millionaire". Dollars to donuts most of those are bad business deductions ("the Porsche belongs to the business, we swear!") or improper capex, both of which are incredibly mundane tax cases. To be honest, this sounds like business as usual at the IRS -- go after the middle-upper-middle class for iffy filings rather than the actual tax cheats with shell corporations, because that would require real work.
A report by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) found that only 54 large partnerships out of the more than 20,000 registered ones were audited by the IRS in 2019. This translated into an audit rate of just 0.27 percent, which is below the audit rate for people making $25,000 per year or less.
Yeah, because "large partnerships" are things like "law firms" and "accounting firms". Not only are they much more likely to be compliant than the average person, they're also a fucking nightmare to sue lol
 
Yeah, because "large partnerships" are things like "law firms" and "accounting firms". Not only are they much more likely to be compliant than the average person, they're also a fucking nightmare to sue lol
As well as those publicly traded partnerships (PTPs) that are really common in certain industries like oil and gas extraction. They might have 1,000,000 limited partners each owning a tiny percentage of the partnership.

I remember one year I screwed around with investing in those and ended up with 11 K-1s to deal with. I'm fine sticking with a W-2 and a 1099-INT.
 
Hot take: People should pay their taxes. There are many, many people who do not. They should be compelled to do so. If they don't like it, they should vote for representatives and policies that will reduce the tax burden.

How do they know what the tax gap is if they haven't audited these taxpayers?
Audit a random but significant number of filings and assume they apply to the whole population? If you want to read what the IRS has to say about it, here you go: https://www.irs.gov/statistics/irs-the-tax-gap
 
Audit a random but significant number of filings and assume they apply to the whole population? If you want to read what the IRS has to say about it, here you go: https://www.irs.gov/statistics/irs-the-tax-gap
Interesting, that's exactly the same approach we use to project misstatements in a population. Presumably the more they audit the more accurate the estimate becomes until it reaches the factual tax gap.
 
Why is the current administration so widely hated? Oh right. Because of shit like this. Fix the economy instead of shaking down the pleb. Because this shit is exactly why people are leaning towards criminality now. See California.
 
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