The Boston Globe

IRS to expand crackdown on high-wealth tax dodgers

Commission­er highlights new initiative­s

- By Fatima Hussein

WASHINGTON — IRS Commission­er Danny Werfel has a message for high-wealth tax cheats who are wrongly deducting private jet travel and otherwise shorting the government on their taxes: Pay your fair share so “others aren’t shoulderin­g the burden of funding our government.”

He also has a thought for ordinary taxpayers putting off the inevitable with less than a month left in tax-filing season: “Get it done.” (And double-check your work.)

Werfel, who will hit the oneyear mark at the helm of the IRS in April, said in a wide-ranging interview with the Associated Press that the agency will expand its pursuit of high-wealth tax dodgers with new initiative­s in the coming months and is using tools like artificial intelligen­ce to ferret out abuses and taking the fight to sophistica­ted scammers.

That doesn’t mean the IRS has undergone a complete image makeover. There’s still plenty of criticism to go around, including from Republican lawmakers who accuse the agency of heavyhande­d overreach.

“We’re kind of like the NFL referee — when we get the call right or wrong, we get booed, and we’re OK with that,” Werfel said.

But efforts to crack down on high-wealth tax cheats are starting to bite, he says, and that should mean more money coming in to fund the government.

“It’s having an impact,” Werfel said. Large corporate filers and others are “taking notice that the IRS is ramping up our scrutiny, and I think that will inevitably result in more compliance” — and revenue.

Werfel is promising taxpayers better service this year as he works to repair the agency’s image as an outdated and maligned tax collector. But it’s a tall order for a federal agency that even he has referred to as “iconically unpopular” with the American public.

“We have some myth-busting to do,” Werfel said, referring to alarmist and inaccurate Republican claims that the agency plans to hire 87,000 armed agents ready to harass middleinco­me earners.

“We are not,” he said. “We are hiring phone assisters armed only with phone headsets. We’re hiring accountant­s armed only with calculator­s.”

Werfel took over an agency that was understaff­ed and drowning in unprocesse­d tax returns after decades of underfundi­ng.

Shortly before he arrived, the IRS received an $80 billion infusion under the Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act passed in 2022. But Republican­s have been chipping away at that money.

Last year’s debt ceiling and budget cuts deal between Republican­s and the White House resulted in $1.4 billion rescinded from the agency and a separate agreement to take $20 billion from the IRS over the next two years and divert those funds to other programs. And this past January, a debt ceiling deal meant to avoid a government shutdown frontloade­d the full $20 billion cut to this year.

Werfel has been in a race against time to show how improvemen­ts to the agency can benefit taxpayers. He said priorities include customer service improvemen­ts like answering the phones faster and making sure the rich “pay their fair share.”

The agency also is piloting a program for people to file their taxes directly to the agency without the help — or cost — of private commercial software.

Werfel said more than 50,000 people in 12 states have started using the new Direct File system to complete their taxes. The free online tool is available for people with very simple W-2s and who claim a standard deduction for their federal income taxes.

The Direct File rollout has drawn some consternat­ion from commercial software firms like Intuit, as well as Republican­s who argue there are free filing programs that already exist.

But so far, Werfel says, “people are telling us that they found it to be quick and easy, and everyone certainly loves that it’s free. And their No. 1 question is: Are we going to have this again next year?”

Overall, Werfel says, the agency has added “more tools to IRS.gov in the last two years than in the previous 20” to make tax-filing easier.

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