Simplify the Tax Code Instead of Creating an IRS Rival to TurboTax
The Wall Street Journal reported today that “the IRS is working on steps to improve tax administration.” Most notably, this would include a free, government-run tax preparation service that would allow taxpayers to file simple returns on the IRS’ website. The move is opposed by tax-prep behemoths like H&R Block and Intuit, TurboTax’s parent company.
Lawmakers from both parties have promised simple and/or free tax preparation for decades. In May 1985, President Ronald Reagan proposed “a system where more than half of us would not even have to fill out a return,” wherein “you would automatically receive your refund or a letter explaining any additional tax you owe.” In 2006, Austan Goolsbee, who later served as chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under President Barack Obama, proposed the “Simple Return,” a system of return-free filing that “might apply to as many as 40 percent of Americans, for whom it could save up to 225 million hours of time and more than $2 billion a year in tax preparation fees.”
The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act was passed with the pledge that taxpayers would be able to file their taxes on “a form the size of a postcard.” But in practice, that isn’t what we got: Americans still spend billions of hours and hundreds of billions of dollars to file.
Part of the reason, as the Journal article intimates, is industry pressure: Intuit alone has spent nearly $45 million since 1998 lobbying Congress. The company even managed to help kill a 2013 proposal that would allow the IRS to pre-fill tax return information, similar to Reagan’s proposition from decades earlier.
Notably, the IRS already offers Free File, as it has since 2002. The program allows taxpayers earning l
Article from Latest