The Internal Revenue Service has released a new set of
tax gap estimates for tax year 2006. The
$300 Billion number for net uncollected tax that we had been using now looks
like closer to $400 Billion.
“The new tax gap
estimate represents the first full update of the report in five years, and it
shows the nation’s compliance rate is essentially unchanged from the last
review covering tax year 2001.
The
voluntary compliance rate — the percentage of total tax revenues paid on a
timely basis — for tax year 2006 is estimated to be 83.1 percent. The voluntary
compliance rate for 2006 is statistically unchanged from the most recent prior
estimate of 83.7 percent calculated for tax year 2001.”
The IRS suggests taxpayers did not pay $450 Billion on
time in 2006. The tax agency eventually collects around $65 Billion was
collected via audits and late payments.
The result is a net tax gap for 2006 of $385 Billion, $95 Billion higher
than the $290 Billion previously estimated for 2001.
The increased gap is largely due to “the growth in total tax liabilities. In addition, some growth in the
tax gap estimate is attributed to better data and improved estimation methods.”
According to the Service -
"As was the
case in 2001, the underreporting of income remained the biggest contributing
factor to the tax gap in 2006."
The complete breakout:
•Under-reporting accounted
for an estimated $376 Billion of the gross tax gap in 2006, up from $285 Billion
in 2001.
•Tax non-filing accounted for $28 Billion in 2006, up
from $27 Billion in 2001.
•Underpayment of tax increased to $46 Billion, up from
$33 Billion in the previous study.
The IRS found -
“Overall,
compliance is highest where there is third-party information reporting and/or
withholding. For example, most wages and salaries are reported by employers to
the IRS on Forms W-2 and are subject to withholding. As a result, a net of only
1 percent of wage and salary income was misreported. But amounts subject to
little or no information reporting had a 56 percent net misreporting rate in
2006.”
So increased 1099 reporting is to be expected, which has
already begun with the new Form 1099-K.
The biggest single component, representing 27% of the
$450 Billion estimate, is “business income” for individuals (on the Form 1040),
which accounted for $122 Billion of the under-reporting amount – and area where
there is minimal third-party reporting. “Small
corporations” (assets less than $10 Million) under-reporting was only $19
Billion. I expect most of this is from
under-reporting on Schedule C.
There is no doubt from these findings that Schedule Cs
will be an audit target, especially those with consistent losses.
However – I still believe it is bad advice to tell ALL
taxpayers who have a Schedule C business to incorporate.
As I have said in the past –
“The decision to
incorporate a business requires careful review of all the specific facts and
circumstances of the individual situation. And taxes are not the only
consideration. In a majority of cases it is not financially beneficial, either
in the short or long term, to incorporate.
While
incorporating will certainly reduce one's 1040 audit risk, it is very often not
the best idea for the average sole proprietorship. Incorporation can generate
much more paperwork, recordkeeping, federal and state tax filings, costs, and
general all-round "agita" than it is worth.
The
advice that one should incorporate solely for the purpose of avoiding an audit
seems to me to be saying, ‘If you want to cheat on your taxes you can
incorporate and the IRS will not audit you’. It is not good tax or financial
advice.
An IRS
audit is not something that should be avoided at all costs. Tax returns should
be prepared, and decisions about choosing a business entity should be made, in
such a manner as to generate the absolute least amount of federal, state and
local taxes (income and payroll) within the parameters of federal and state
laws. If you will pay less tax (income and payroll), fees and other costs by
filing a Schedule C you should do so, honestly and ethically, and not worry
about being audited.
If you are reporting all of your income, deducting only
legitimate and documented expenses, and keeping good records then any audit
should result in “no change”.
Besides, as I previously reported – less than ½ of 1% of
1040s are actually chosen for a “sit down” audit.
PS - Click here to see a larger version of the above map.
TTFN
We live in a day and age of information at your fingertips, instant messaging, live around the world news updates, internet the speed of light, little tablets with books and apps, rocket ships, little race cars on Mars, etc, etc, and the financial part of our government is working with 6 year old stats and making it sounds like it just happened yesterday.
ReplyDelete(((( shaking head ))))
Just passing along some interesting reading for you, especially the GAO reports on the side bar
ReplyDeletehave a good one...
I bet I din't leave the link to what I was talking about in my previous message to you... LOL
ReplyDeletehttp://www.pnwtaxschool.com/sites/default/files/documents/white_paper_-_rtrp_regulations_1.3.12_0.pdf