Orlando Sentinel

When the IRS is the good guy: Increased capacity means the rich pay fair share

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In an analysis released this week, the Internal Revenue Service and the Treasury Department admitted that they had been wrong with an earlier estimate of $390 billion in additional tax revenues coming in during the next decade as a result of the $80 billion IRS funding boost in President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act, passed in 2022.

They didn’t undershoot; it turns out, the additional revenue is likely much higher, climbing to around $561 billion between 2024 and 2034 when factoring in not only additional enforcemen­t but other benefits of the expanded capacity, which Republican­s had of course stringentl­y opposed.

There’s something a little bit ironic about the GOP legislator­s who are claiming with a straight face that Donald Trump simply cannot be prosecuted for his many sustained efforts to subvert the 2020 election — efforts that, remember, included strong-arming state electoral officials and discussion­s of invoking the Insurrecti­on Act to deploy troops on American streets — insisting that more IRS agents was tyranny.

Increased revenues will be presented as extracting more taxes from the public, but that’s disingenuo­us for at least four reasons. One, none of these are additional taxes; they are the taxes that were already owed and that wealthier people were often not paying, knowing that accounting tricks and the under-resourced IRS would insulate them from ever having to pony up. Two, the vast majority of these increases are not being drawn from struggling families or low-income taxpayers but from those well-to-do people who owed much more but paid much less.

Three, this analysis isn’t just about tax cheats and the benefits of enforcemen­t; it specifical­ly notes that it is incorporat­ing additional revenues from technology that makes compliance easier, as well as the “nudge” towards compliance that the specter of additional enforcemen­t brings.

Four, this isn’t about milking a decrepit economy for more government revenues; the economy is booming in defiance of many dire prediction­s.

Elected officials will mostly at least pay lip service to the idea of some return on public investment, and it’s hard to argue with an $80 billion down payment producing an almost half-trillion-dollar return even after paying for itself. This isn’t just a question about scoring political points, this is real money that can be used for concrete public purposes — more infrastruc­ture, green energy incentives, transit projects, whatever. Real, tangible things that can improve people’s lives.

That House Republican­s are obsessed with stripping the IRS’ expanded funding away, having clawed back as much as $21 billion in future disburseme­nts from the IRA’s historic investment, gives away the game that they’re quite uninterest­ed in the rich paying their taxes. Simultaneo­usly, they’re fretting about an increasing federal deficit, willfully ignoring the connection between that and decreased tax revenues.

Instead of shying away from taking credit for an expanded IRS, Democrats should own it and communicat­e to the public just why this is an excellent deal. People might have a negative knee-jerk reaction to the idea of federal tax agents collecting Uncle Sam’s cut, but it sounds a lot better when you frame it as the rich subsidizin­g everyone’s child care and housing, building roads and softening the financial impact of medical emergencie­s.

Put that all forward, and let the GOP tie itself in knots explaining why a multi-millionair­e should pay nothing in federal taxes instead.

This editorial reflects the opinion of the New York Daily News Editorial Board. The Sentinel often adapts editorials that reflect our overall point of view. The Orlando Sentinel Editorial Board consists of Opinion Editor Krys Fluker, Editor-in-Chief Julie Anderson and Viewpoints Editor Jay Reddick. Contact us at insight@orlandosen­tinel.com

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/AP FILE ?? The exterior of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) building is seen in Washington.
SUSAN WALSH/AP FILE The exterior of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) building is seen in Washington.

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