Chattanooga Times Free Press

IRS KEEPS ITS SAME OLD STRIPES

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Congressio­nal Democrats last year showered the IRS with $80 billion in new funding in an effort to close an estimated $600 billion “tax gap,” the difference between income taxes actually owed and those actually collected. This was supposed to help pay for the Biden administra­tion’s ongoing spendapalo­oza that has run the national debt to more than $30 trillion.

The move will essentiall­y double the size of the IRS in coming years, allowing it to hire 87,000 employees over the next decade — many of whom would replace outgoing staff — and increasing its enforcemen­t capabiliti­es. Republican­s warned that more middle- and lower-income Americans would find themselves in the agency’s sights, but Democrats insisted that only wealthy Americans would face an increase in audits.

Yet a recent examinatio­n of IRS data shows that the agency in 2022 “continued historic trends of hassling primarily low-income taxpayers,” Liz Wolfe of Reason wrote last week, “with relatively few millionair­es and billionair­es getting caught up in the audit sweep.”

The numbers come from Syracuse University’s Transactio­nal Records Access Clearingho­use, which found that the “taxpayer class with unbelievab­ly high audit rates — five and a half times virtually everyone else — were low-income wage-earners taking the earned income tax credit.”

Supporters of the IRS funding boost argue — in the words of ProPublica report — that the bureaucrac­y was on “life support” because of years of fiscal starvation and that the agency will now have the resources necessary to redirect its attention to millionair­es and billionair­es. But there’s no reason to believe this will be true in practice, given the tendency of most public bureaucrac­ies to follow the path of least resistance. In the case of the IRS, that means concentrat­ing on simpler returns rather than putting the microscope on wealthy taxpayers with their bevy of accountant­s and attorneys.

Whether that’s fair is irrelevant to the reality of how the IRS functions.

The danger “with any enhanced IRS efforts, if they don’t come with strict oversight and strict requiremen­ts from Congress,” Andrew Lautz of the National Taxpayers Union told Reason, “is that they fall hardest on low- and middle-income taxpayers.” And, as Mr. Lautz noted, the agency’s new money comes with virtually no accountabi­lity measures.

Even if the IRS in coming years more aggressive­ly targets high-earning Americans, the idea that workers of more modest means won’t also face increased scrutiny is risible — as is the idea that stepped-up enforcemen­t will create a windfall for the Treasury. The 2022 data show the agency remains focused on taxpayers that its auditors believe they can handle. And there’s no reason to think that will change any time soon.

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