This topic has not been in the limelight lately so I though I would bring it up once again.
I have heard of several tax preparers who are telling their clients when regulation becomes a reality they will begin to mail their returns to IRS as self-prepared returns. A bowl will be placed on their desks for contributions from their clients for doing their returns. Again I have heard of several tax preparers who refuse to use any computer software or efiling for the returns that they do. Even in this day and age there are tax preparers who remain afraid of computers and anykind of automation in their work. Attitudes such as these are very hard to change. I have no answer to this delimena in our profession. Do you?
I just read an excellent paper on the regulation of tax professionals by Larry Gray, CPA. This paper is available on the NATP website, and you do not have to a member to access it. Type in NATP into Goggle or other search engine that you use. This paper was written and presented to the House Sub-Committee on Oversight and is dated July 20,2005.
I hope that the final regulations will also take into account "test phobia" that some people have including me. One interesting part of this paper points out the small percentage of nonpersonal tax returns filed as compared to the large percentage of personal tax returns filed. "There are approximately 131 million individual returns prepared annually compared to 6 million corporate returns, 2 million partnership returns and 1 million gift, trust and excise tax returns." Mr. Gray states, "That it is not reasonable to test specialists in areas that they do not practice.
It is my position that we as tax professionals have everything to gain with some form of licensing of tax preparers. Most importantly the public does too.
I have heard of several tax preparers who are telling their clients when regulation becomes a reality they will begin to mail their returns to IRS as self-prepared returns. A bowl will be placed on their desks for contributions from their clients for doing their returns. Again I have heard of several tax preparers who refuse to use any computer software or efiling for the returns that they do. Even in this day and age there are tax preparers who remain afraid of computers and anykind of automation in their work. Attitudes such as these are very hard to change. I have no answer to this delimena in our profession. Do you?
I just read an excellent paper on the regulation of tax professionals by Larry Gray, CPA. This paper is available on the NATP website, and you do not have to a member to access it. Type in NATP into Goggle or other search engine that you use. This paper was written and presented to the House Sub-Committee on Oversight and is dated July 20,2005.
I hope that the final regulations will also take into account "test phobia" that some people have including me. One interesting part of this paper points out the small percentage of nonpersonal tax returns filed as compared to the large percentage of personal tax returns filed. "There are approximately 131 million individual returns prepared annually compared to 6 million corporate returns, 2 million partnership returns and 1 million gift, trust and excise tax returns." Mr. Gray states, "That it is not reasonable to test specialists in areas that they do not practice.
It is my position that we as tax professionals have everything to gain with some form of licensing of tax preparers. Most importantly the public does too.
Comment