Has the IRS Hit Bottom?
Its been almost 10 years since Republicans, riding the Tea Party wave, took control of the House of Representatives and started hacking at the IRS enforcement budget. Down it went, some years the cuts were steep, some not, as Republican lawmakers laughed off dire warnings about the consequences of letting tax cheats run free.
For the past couple years, ProPublica has been cataloging the descent of the IRS. Weve watched as audits of the rich and the largest corporations have plummeted and become less aggressive, while audits of poor taxpayers have remained comparatively high.
This week, the IRS released its annual disclosure of enforcement statistics. Every year, its an opportunity to measure how effectively the U.S. government has sabotaged its own ability to enforce its tax laws. This years report, along with other data ProPublica has collected on the state of the IRS, is full of evidence that the IRS has hit a passel of historic lows.
Overall, 2019 brought the lowest audit rate in generations. ProPublica searched back to the 1950s and could not find a lower audit rate of individual returns. The story is similar for corporate audits. The largest corporations, those with assets over $20 billion, used to be audited every year. Last year, only about half were audited.
Fewer audits has meant less revenue, particularly from big businesses that pay the biggest tax bills. In 2010, the IRS collected around $28 billion from audits (adjusting for inflation). In 2019, it collected $11 billion. Thats a drop of 61%.
https://www.propublica.org/article/has-the-irs-hit-bottom
Mike 03
(16,616 posts)or you're accidentally declared dead (when you're not) or you are a victim of tax fraud or identity theft, because it will take years to get it fixed.