The Signal

Not So Obvious Facts

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In its Feb. 2 edition, The Signal published a letter to the editor written by Rick Barker. In his letter, Mr. Barker stated: “Now for the obvious fact: Extremely wealthy people are not who the IRS goes after now or would go after should they get that $80 billion more in funding over the next few years.”

Based on my nearly 50 years of experience as a tax practition­er, the IRS examines the tax returns of wealthy people, but lacks the resources to effectivel­y do so. When I was a partner in a Big 4 accounting firm, I served many wealthy clients — including several billionair­es. Based on my firsthand experience and published IRS data, in recent years the IRS has encountere­d much greater success auditing simpler returns, so it has collected more taxes from those taxpayers. That was not always the case, but is currently a consequenc­e of significan­tly decreased IRS funding over the past decade.

A portion of the increased IRS funding approved by Congress last year will go to increasing the IRS auditing capabiliti­es. The Treasury Department and IRS are focusing on expanding audit capacity in three areas. The first is targeting taxpayers who have an adjusted gross income exceeding $400,000. The second is pursuing large corporatio­ns, with an emphasis on multinatio­nal corporatio­ns. The final category is developing an effective audit procedures for partnershi­ps that are employed by wealthy individual­s, large corporatio­ns and Wall Street to structure tax avoidance arrangemen­ts. If the IRS is endowed with adequate resources to properly train IRS agents and implement effective processes, those newly targeted taxpayers will be much juicier low hanging fruit for the IRS.

Based on what I have read in profession­al publicatio­ns and what I have heard in my conversati­ons with senior IRS officials in the Examinatio­n Division, those are the areas where the IRS is focusing its attention. A paradigm shift within the IRS is starting, but Rome was not built in a day and those officials estimate it will take five to seven years to rebuild the needed capacity — unless, of course, Congress repeals the additional IRS funding.

Although it may not be obvious, those are the facts.

Jim de Bree Valencia

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