Why so many errors in the tax preparation, it's that a majority of the population believes anything that happens to them it has to be someone else's fault. It's a new norm of 'take the money and run' no matter who or what the money represents.
Ever wonder why 50 million are on food stamps and the work force participation less the 63%, lowest in decades. It just easier to take from others then to work for them selves. There just seems the fear of consequences is nonexistent.
Why Are There So Many Errors in the EITC Program?
Source: Kyle Pomerleau, "IRS Releases More Detail on EITC Over-Payments," Tax Foundation, September 8, 2014.
September 10, 2014
Government reports have chronicled the problem of payment errors within the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) program. A full quarter of EITC payments in a single year can be the product of errors, costing taxpayers $14 billion annually.
Why does this happen? Kyle Pomerleau, economist at the Tax Foundation, writes that the two most common explanations are fraud (purposely misrepresenting one's finances to qualify for the EITC or increase the size of one's EITC payment) and mistake on the part of filers (for example, a divorced couple might each claim their child as a dependent).
A recent study by the IRS looked into the issue of errors, and while it did not pinpoint the exact cause of the problem, Pomerleau points out some of the important aspects of the IRS report:
Why does this happen? Kyle Pomerleau, economist at the Tax Foundation, writes that the two most common explanations are fraud (purposely misrepresenting one's finances to qualify for the EITC or increase the size of one's EITC payment) and mistake on the part of filers (for example, a divorced couple might each claim their child as a dependent).
A recent study by the IRS looked into the issue of errors, and while it did not pinpoint the exact cause of the problem, Pomerleau points out some of the important aspects of the IRS report:
- Fifty-eight percent of all errors involved filers misreporting income, with an average cost of $800 per hour. Looking at dollar value, income misreporting added up to just 35 percent of all errors.
- Twenty-one percent of all errors involved filers claiming children as dependents when, in fact, they were not. Dollar-wise, these errors added up to 38 percent of overpayment costs.
- Nine percent of errors involved filers who misreported their income and incorrectly claimed children, costing $2,451 per filing.
- Twelve percent of errors involved invalid Social Security numbers and similar issues, costing $1,447 per error.
No comments:
Post a Comment