The Denver Post

Biden seeks $80B to beef up audits

He wants to crack down on tax evasion by high earners

- By Jim Tankersley and Alan Rappeport

WASHINGTON» President Joe Biden, in an effort to pay for his ambitious economic agenda, is expected to propose giving the Internal Revenue Service an extra $80 billion and more authority over the next 10 years to help crack down on tax evasion by high earners and large corporatio­ns, according to two people familiar with the plan.

The additional money and enforcemen­t power will accompany new disclosure requiremen­ts for people who own businesses that are not organized as corporatio­ns and for other wealthy people who could be hiding income from the government.

The Biden administra­tion will portray those efforts — coupled with new taxes it is proposing on corporatio­ns and the rich — as a way to level the tax playing field between typical American workers and very high earners who employ sophistica­ted efforts to minimize or avoid taxation. The $80 billion in proposed funding would be an increase of twothirds over the agency’s entire funding levels for the past decade.

The administra­tion estimates that giving the IRS an additional $80 billion over a decade could raise at least $780 billion in new tax revenue, for a net gain of at least $700 billion. Biden plans to use money raised by the effort to help pay for the cost of his “American Families Plan,” which he will detail before addressing a joint session of Congress on Wednesday. It will be the largest single revenue raiser for the plan.

That plan, which follows his $2.3 trillion infrastruc­ture package, is expected to cost at least $1.5 trillion and will include universal prekinderg­arten, a federal paid leave program, efforts to make child care more affordable, free community college for all and tax credits meant to fight poverty.

The administra­tion also aims to pay for the plan by raising the top marginal income tax rate for wealthy Americans to 39.6% from 37% and raising capital gains tax rates for those who earn more than $1 million a year, which would combine to raise hundreds of billions of dollars. Biden will also seek to raise the tax rate on income that people earning more than $1 million per year receive through stock dividends, according to a person familiar with the proposal.

The administra­tion is expected to portray the $780 billion it expects to collect through enhanced enforcemen­t as conservati­ve. That figure includes only money directly raised by enhanced tax

audits and additional reporting requiremen­ts, and not any additional revenue from people or companies choosing to pay more taxes after previously avoiding them.

Many economists and tax experts welcomed the proposal, which they said would help reverse years of declining enforcemen­t actions against companies and the rich at the agency.

“The plan is good news for honest filers and businesses, the budget, and the rule of law,” said Chye-Ching Huang, executive director of the Tax Law Center at NYU Law. “Stopping tax cheats from having an unfair advantage helps honest businesses to compete and thrive.”

Previous administra­tions have long talked about trying to close the so-called tax gap — the amount of money that taxpayers owe but that is not collected each year. This month, the head of the IRS, Charles Rettig, told a Senate committee that the agency lacked the resources to catch tax cheats, costing the government as much as $1 trillion a year.

The erosion of resources at the IRS was detailed in a Congressio­nal Budget Office report last year that examined the agency’s work from 2010 to 2018.

During that time frame, the IRS’s annual budget declined by 20% and its staff declined by 22%. Funding for enforcemen­t activities fell by nearly a third.

With less money and staff, the IRS was forced to become more lax at enforcing tax laws.

Examinatio­ns of individual tax returns fell by 46% and audits of corporate tax filings fell by 37%, according to the CBO.

Biden aims to change that. His economic team includes a University of Pennsylvan­ia economist, Natasha Sarin, whose research with Harvard University economist Lawrence H. Summers suggests that the United States could raise as much as $1.1 trillion over a decade via increased tax enforcemen­t.

Summers praised Biden’s expected plan in an email late Monday.

“This is the broadly right approach,” he said. “Deteriorat­ion in IRS enforcemen­t effort and informatio­n gathering is scandalous. The Biden plan would make the American tax system fairer, more efficient and, I’m confident, raise more revenue than official scorekeepe­rs now forecast — likely a trillion over 10 years.”

Biden’s efforts would incorporat­e some of Sarin and Summers’ suggestion­s, including investing heavily in informatio­n technology improvemen­ts to help the agency better target its audits of high earners and companies.

They would also provide a dedicated funding stream to the agency, to enable officials to steadily ramp up their enforcemen­t practices without fear of budget cuts, and to signal to potential tax evaders that the agency’s efforts will not be soon diminished. Biden would also add new requiremen­ts for people who own socalled pass-through corporatio­ns or hold their wealth in opaque structures, reminiscen­t of a program establishe­d under President Barack Obama that helps the agency better track possible tax evasion by Americans with overseas holdings.

Some conservati­ve tax activists oppose any additional spending at the agency. Grover Norquist, the president of Americans for Tax Reform, said in an interview that additional enforcemen­t dollars risk increasing the number of politicall­y motivated audits while burdening small business owners, with no guarantee of a large increase in revenues.

“Nothing says these guys are going to raise money,” he said. “The IRS has been highly politicize­d for a long time. They’ve done nothing to fix it.”

Tax experts tend to agree that boosting enforcemen­t capacity of the IRS will more than pay for itself, but it is not clear how much is really needed at a time when many of the agency’s functions can be automated and more tax returns are filed electronic­ally.

The CBO estimated last year that an additional $40 billion of funding over 10 years would increase government revenues by $103 billion. Administra­tion officials are confident the actual amount is much higher.

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