I
have mention the tax gap several times in the past; now that the
President has brought up the subject we should discuss it and what it
means to you in more depth. The concept of the “tax gap” was created by
the IRS in a failed attempt to get a substantial increase to its
budget. The IRS launched a study and determined that there was a
difference, a gap, between the amount of taxes it collects and what it
should collect if everybody paid the correct amount of tax. The study
showed an annual gap of about $300 billion. The IRS took their study to
Congress in 2006 to ask for an increase in their budget so they could
close this gap. Congress refused the request.
Instead of a budget increase the IRS got a reprimand for not doing its job (collecting taxes) very
well. Since then, the IRS has been under tremendous pressure from
Congress to close the gap. The IRS’ response to this pressure has been
to increase the number of audits, become more rigid in waving penalties
and to initiate the National Research Program (NRP). In the NRP the IRS
performs random audits and uses statistics to project the audit results
on to the general public. The NRP audits are the worst possible type of
audit a taxpayer can go through. In an NRP audit the IRS looks at every
line on the tax return. In a normal audit the IRS questions some of the
items on the tax return but it leaves the majority of the return
untouched.
In
my opinion the tax gap more a product of fantasy than reality. We
all know that some people cheat on their taxes but most of those people
seem to be involved with the administration. The Secretary of the
Treasury (who is in charge of the IRS) is an example. $300 billion of
tax cheating is simply not credible to me.
The IRS Commissioner stated on February 16, 2007, before the House Committee on the Budget:
“...the
most recent NRP study did a good job of updating our numbers, but we
need more research to better identify the sources of non-compliance on
a timely and continuing basis....Despite all of our progress, there is
still much we do not know about the tax gap. Although the updated
estimates provided by the NRP study are more accurate than our previous
estimates, and more accurate than the estimates made at various times
by others using more indirect methods, they have many limitations.”
According
to the commissioner they have no idea where the gap comes from “we need
more research to better identify the sources of non-compliance” but
they know it exists and about how much it is?
Whether
or not the tax gap is real the administration now seems ready to act on
closing the gap. There are three types of proposals to accomplish
this:
-
More extensive reporting to the IRS
- many tax gap proposals would boost the reporting that businesses and
individuals have to do to unprecedented levels. Here are just some of
the ideas
• Force online businesses to report user’s online income from auctions and other sources.
• Turn private citizens into IRS informers
in the hunt for more information on sales from small businesses. For
example, a young college student buying a new car from a family friend
could be required to report the transaction to the IRS.
• Require investment brokers to report profits
from securities sales, rather than just the sales themselves. This is
starting in 2010 and might not be too bad, but we had better make sure
our brokers have the correct basis information for our stocks.
-
Increase Payments Subject to Withholding. For example the IRS could require us to withhold taxes from payments to:
• the plumber or electrician who makes repairs in the home
• the babysitter down the street
• the dry cleaners or hairdressers
-
Increase the IRS powers
These
ideas are nightmarish for the average person not because they will get
caught cheating on their taxes but because it would require an enormous
amount of additional paperwork and penalties for not completing that
reporting correctly and timely.
At
this point we can’t say for certain what new steps the Obama
Administration and the IRS will take to close the tax gap but we know
for sure that we are living in a “Post Kinder and Friendlier IRS
World.” Increased scrutiny and enforcement by the IRS ensures
that little tax “indiscretions” and “exaggerations” that were not
noticed in the past will not be tolerated in the future. That is why I
am offering you this deal: if you purchase our webinar “Surviving in a Post Kinder and Friendlier IRS World” I will give you free our webinar “Higher Taxes Ahead” Order "Surviving in a Post Kinder and Friendlier IRS World" and we will send you a link to get "Higher Taxes Ahead" for free.