from Lasser's: IRS has audited 46,000 returns from 2001. The "tax gap" (difference between taxes paid and taxes actually due) was $345 billion. The audits were part of their three-year National Research Program to update IRS's audit selection criteria. The audits confirmed that the lion's share of the tax gap was underreporting by individuals -- $68 billion was non-farm Schedule C sole proprietors (no surprise there) who reported only 48% of taxable income. Audit odds increased sharply for Schedule C filers reporting gross receipts of $100,000 or more.
Total individual audits for 2005 -- 1,215,308. Up 21% from '04.
Possible tax gap remedies suggested: backup withholding on 1099s for independent contractors, requiring reporting of stock cost as well as sales, 1099s for corporate income from personal services.
"Face-to-face" audits have fallen and "correspondence" audits were up and are a large part of the increase (I don't know why they even call them "audits." They just send a letter, say you left this off, please send the money. What's tough about an "audit" like that?)
Total individual audits for 2005 -- 1,215,308. Up 21% from '04.
Possible tax gap remedies suggested: backup withholding on 1099s for independent contractors, requiring reporting of stock cost as well as sales, 1099s for corporate income from personal services.
"Face-to-face" audits have fallen and "correspondence" audits were up and are a large part of the increase (I don't know why they even call them "audits." They just send a letter, say you left this off, please send the money. What's tough about an "audit" like that?)
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