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How the Rich Cheat On Their Taxes
by Janet Novack
October 23, 2008 provided by
A new study based on unpublished
Internal Revenue Service data shows the rich are different when it comes to
paying taxes: They hide more of their income.
The previously unreported study
estimates that taxpayers whose true income was between $500,000 and $1
million a year understated their adjusted gross incomes by 21% overall in
2001, compared to an 8% underreporting rate for those earning $50,000 to
$100,000 and even lower rates for those earning less. (The "net misreporting
rate" as the IRS calls it, includes both underreported income and inflated
deductions.)
In all, because of their higher
noncompliance rates, those with true incomes of $200,000 or more received
25% of all income, but accounted for 40% of net underreported income and 42%
of underreported tax in 2001, the new analysis finds.
The study was written by Joel
Slemrod, an economics professor and director of the Office of Tax Policy
Research at the University of Michigan's business school and IRS economist
Andrew Johns. It has not been officially endorsed or even released by the
IRS and seems sure to add fuel to the election season debate over whether
those earning $250,000 or more should pay higher tax rates, as Sen. Barack
Obama, the Democratic presidential nominee, has proposed.
The Slemrod/Johns analysis uses
unpublished data from special research audits the IRS conducted on a sample
of 45,000 individual returns filed for 2001. It was the IRS' first such
research effort since 1988, and it led the agency to estimate the 2001 gross
"tax gap" at $345 billion.
The main reason for the
income-related cheating disparity: Higher income folks receive more of their
income from sources that are easier to hide, including self-employment
earnings; income from rents, partnerships and S corporations; and capital
gains.
"The distribution of
noncompliance lines up pretty closely with who gets income that's hard (for
the IRS) to keep track of,'' Slemrod says. Still, he notes, the distribution
of income by source doesn't explain all the increased noncompliance at
higher income levels.
In its 2001 tax gap study, the
IRS estimated that individuals underreported business income by 43% overall.
Sole proprietors, who report self-employment income on schedule C of their
tax returns, underreported their income a stunning 57%.
By contrast, the IRS found, 99%
of all wages were reported by individual tax filers. The obvious explanation
is that workers have no choice--their employers report their earnings to the
IRS and withhold taxes on them.
Meanwhile, net capital gains for
2001 were underreported by 12%, the IRS estimated. The IRS receives reports
from brokers of taxpayers' gross sales of stocks and bonds, but not of their
initial costs or profits--therefore it has no way to easily check their
reported capital gains. (Last month, as part of the $700 billion bailout
bill, Congress mandated that brokers report the basis of any stocks bought
in 2011 or later.)
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