Houston Chronicle

IRS chief sees huge task ahead to administer new tax law

- By Marcy Gordon

WASHINGTON — The acting head of the IRS says the current tax-filing season has gone well, while acknowledg­ing the tough challenge the cash-strapped agency faces of administer­ing the new tax law that will affect 2019 returns.

Acting IRS Commission­er David Kautter told Congress Thursday that some 79 million refunds totaling about $226 billion have been issued as of April 6, averaging $2,900 — up $13 from last year. Around 80 percent of returns filed claimed a refund. The final year under the “old” tax regime, 2017, has to be accounted for by taxpayers in returns by Tuesday.

The agency, pummeled for years by criticism from congressio­nal Republican­s and funding cuts, now must administer and enforce the most sweeping overhaul of the U.S. tax code in three decades.

Kautter told the Senate Finance Committee that the new law “requires extensive work by the IRS this year and next.” The paperwork alone is immense: about 450 forms and instructio­ns will have to be amended.

Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, the panel's chairman, said the new burden falls on an agency with a history of mismanagem­ent and taxpayer abuse that is laboring under funding and technology deficits.

The Republican tax-cut legislatio­n was muscled through Congress last year and now stands as President Donald Trump's marquee achievemen­t. It took effect Jan. 1, billed as a boon for the stressed middle class and a key GOP selling point in midterm elections this year. The $1.5 trillion package provides generous tax cuts for corporatio­ns and the wealthiest Americans, and more modest reductions for middle- and lowincome individual­s and families.

The tax cuts for corporatio­ns are permanent, while those for individual­s and families expire in 2026. Nonpartisa­n tax experts project that the law will bring lower taxes for the great majority of Americans, though not all.

 ??  ?? Kautter
Kautter

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States