Showing posts with label nina olson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nina olson. Show all posts

Thursday, January 06, 2011

Here's your Chance to Help Fix the Nation's Tax System

Everyone loves to complain about the U.S. tax system, and as part of her report Nina E. Olson has created a new way for taxpayers to share suggestions to improve the complicated tax code. Think you’ve got the answer? Join in!

From TodayShow.com:

On Wednesday, the National Taxpayer Advocate launched a suggestion box where taxpayers can offer their ideas for reforming the tax system.

“There has been near universal agreement for years that the tax code is broken and needs to be fixed,” National Taxpayer Advocate Nine E. Olson said in a statement announcing her annual report to Congress “Yet no broad-based attempt to reform the tax code has been made.”

Olson said tax reform is the No. 1 priority facing the tax administration, but any attempts to change the system have hit massive roadblocks.

In the release, Olson said she’s hoping to hear what taxpayers would be willing to give up in favor of a more simplified system. She also wants to know what aspects of the current system seem particularly burdensome or unfair.

The Taxpayer Advocate Service helps taxpayers who are experiencing economic problems, need help resolving problems with the IRS or believe the IRS isn’t working the way it should. It’s an independent organization that operates within the IRS.

Read more here

Tax Waste: 6.1 Billion Hours Spent Complying with Federal Tax Code

Earlier today the National Taxpayer Advocate Nina E. Olson issued her new report to Congress. She called the ever-growing tax code's complexity as the most serious problem facing both the IRS and taxpayers. Nina’s got it just right: this is inefficient and leads to frustration, honest mistakes, and widespread evasion. But will her plan to fix it work?

Forbes reports:

    As a measure of how unwieldy the law has become, Olson’s staff found the tax code had grown to 3.8 million words as of Feb. 1, 2010, compared to the 1.4 million words the Joint Committee on Taxation reported in 2001. (That doesn’t include tweaks Congress made to the tax code in 2010—some 579 in all, according to a count kept by tax publisher CCH, a division of Wolters Kluwer.)

    While the burden of complying with all those words has been calculated in different ways, Olson multiplied the IRS’ own estimates of how much time taxpayers spend collecting data for and filling out each individual tax form by the number of forms filed to estimate that Americans (both individuals and businesses) spend 6.1 billion hours a year complying with the code. That’s the equivalent of more than 3 million workers toiling away full time, all year. By way of comparison, the Federal government employs the equivalent of 2.1 million full-time civilian workers and Wal-Mart, the nation’s largest private employer, has 1.4 million workers in the U.S., although not all are full time.

    Complexity is also raising individual taxpayers’ out-of-pocket costs for filing their 1040s, Olson noted. About 60% of individual taxpayers now pay CPAs, enrolled agents, H&R Block or other services to prepare their returns while another 29% use software, such as Intuit’s TurboTax. According to a recent IRS study, the median individual taxpayer (as measured by income) spent $258 in 2007 for tax prep, up from $220 in 2000, in constant, inflation-adjusted dollars.

Continue reading at Forbes.com...

Thursday, July 08, 2010

National Taxpayer Advocate Submits Mid-Year Report to Congress

According to the IRS’ newest press release, National Taxpayer Advocate Nina E. Olson released her mid-year report to Congress yesterday. The report “identifies the priority issues the Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS) will address during the coming fiscal year.”

The report expresses concern about the adequacy of IRS taxpayer service, particularly as the IRS begins to implement health care reform, about new information reporting burdens facing small businesses and others, and about certain IRS collection practices.

Among the areas the report identifies for particular emphasis in FY 2011 are the following:

1. Taxpayer Services

Spending for IRS taxpayer service programs has been declining in recent years. At the same time, more taxpayers have been contacting the IRS for assistance as the IRS has been tasked with administering an increasing number of social benefit programs, including Economic Stimulus Payments, Making Work Pay credits, and First-Time Homebuyer credits. The report says that as a result of the imbalance between taxpayer demand and IRS resources, the IRS has fallen short of providing adequate taxpayer service in important areas. Most notably, after answering a high of 87 percent of its calls from taxpayers seeking to reach a telephone assistor in FY 2004, the IRS answered only 53 percent of its calls in FY 2008 and has set of goal of answering only 71 percent in the current fiscal year.

The report attributes much of the problem to inadequate funding for taxpayer services. While funding for the IRS overall has been increasing in recent years, the additional funding has been earmarked for enforcement programs. An analysis of IRS budget trends conducted by TAS shows that since FY 2004, inflation-adjusted funding for IRS enforcement activities has risen by 17.9 percent while spending for taxpayer service programs has declined by 6.8 percent, as shown in the following chart:

Continue reading at IRS.gov…

Thursday, April 08, 2010

The Joy of Tax

As thousands of Americans across the country are spending hours working on their tax returns to meet the tax deadline, Nina Olson – the National Taxpayer Advocate – is once again calling on Congress to simplify the U.S. tax code. Although Olson makes this request every year, according to the Economist she has reportedly become fed up that her professional opinion is being ignored.

The federal tax code, which was 400 pages long in 1913, has swollen to about 70,000. Americans now spend 7.6 billion hours a year grappling with an incomprehensible tangle of deductions, loopholes and arcane reporting requirements. That is the equivalent of 3.8m skilled workers toiling full-time, year-round, just to handle the paperwork. By this measure, the tax-compliance industry is six times larger than car-making.

Every year, the national taxpayer advocate issues a report begging Congress to simplify the system. In her most recent one, published on December 31st, Ms Olson frets that she is repeating herself. She refers Congress to what she said the previous year. An incredible 82% of taxpayers are so flummoxed that they pay for help. Some 60% hire an accountant or tax preparer, while another 22% use tax software. She might have added that even the head of the Internal Revenue Service, Douglas Shulman, gets someone else to do his taxes.

President Barack Obama says he wants to simplify the tax code. But he has just added a ton of health-care-related provisions to the system. And even if he were zealous about simplification, he would find it hard.

Thursday, January 07, 2010

National Taxpayer Advocate Delivers Annual Report to Congress

In their new press release, the IRS discussed the annual report National Taxpayer Advocate Nina E. Olson delivered to Congress. She warned that increased demands on the IRS have eroded the agency’s ability to meet taxpayer service needs and expressed concern that IRS collection practices are harming financially struggling taxpayers without producing significant revenue gains.

In the preface to the report, Olson noted that she is required by statute to identify taxpayer problems, but she wrote that “the IRS in many respects has had an extremely successful year.” She cited, in particular, the IRS’s success in implementing significant legislative changes designed to stimulate the economy in the midst of the filing season.

Among the key issues and themes identified in this year’s report:

Telephone Service. The report designates the IRS’s declining ability to answer telephone calls as the most serious problem facing taxpayers. Olson notes that the IRS has set a target for FY 2010 of answering only 71 percent of calls from taxpayers seeking to speak with a customer service representative about account questions, down from 83 percent in FY 2007.

“In other words, the IRS is planning to be unable to answer about three of every 10 calls it receives,” Olson said, adding that the IRS expects those who get through will have to wait an average of 12 minutes. The report states that this projected level of service is barely above the level of 69 percent notched in 1998, when Congress passed the landmark IRS Restructuring and Reform Act due in large part to concerns about inadequate taxpayer service. “This level of service is unacceptable,” Olson wrote.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

The Case for Overhauling a U.S. Tax System

Sam Dealey of USNews.com recently authored an opinion piece on the need to overhaul the United States tax code. Below is a snippet from the article but you can read the full text here.

"The monopoly on good ideas does not belong to a single party," President-elect Obama reportedly told congressional leaders Monday during a private meeting about an economic stimulus package. "If it's a good idea, we will consider it."

When it comes to taxpayer money—raising, spending, and occasionally deigning to return it—neither party in Congress has demonstrated particularly good ideas lately. The majority of lawmakers seem to believe that stimulating the economy means expanding recurring welfare programs, plowing money into pet projects of only limited or short-term use, and bestowing inadequate, selective tax cuts.

But if Obama is looking for ideas, he might consult with Nina Olson, the national taxpayer advocate at the IRS. In her annual report to Congress, released yesterday, Olson makes a persuasive case for overhauling the U.S. tax system.

"The largest source of compliance burdens for taxpayers, and the IRS, is the overwhelming complexity of the tax code," Olson writes. "The only meaningful way to reduce these burdens is to simplify the tax code enormously."

It's common sense and worth a read, but a few figures stand out:

  • Americans spend 7.6 billion hours annually trying to figure out their federal taxes. Working eight-hour days, five days a week, 50 weeks a year, that's the equivalent of 3.8 million full-time workers.
  • At the average hourly wage of $27.54, that tax-preparation time amounts to $193 billion, or 14 percent of aggregate income tax receipts.
  • A staggering 60 percent of individual taxpayers are so bewildered by the tax code that they hire outside preparers. An additional 22 percent buy computer software.

Friday, February 08, 2008

Tax Policy Podcast with Taxpayer Advocate Nina Olson

The Tax Foundation Blog recently conducted an interview with interview with Ms. Nina Olson, the nation's Taxpayer Advocate at the IRS. The podcast interview can be downloaded at the Tax Policy Podcast page.

In the interview Ms Olson discusses the role of the Taxpayer Advocate in protecting taxpayer rights, the independence of the office, and the annual report she submits to Congress identifying problems facing taxpayers. She also talks about the problems that both the IRS and taxpayers face when they make last minute changes to the tax code. The interview is slightly over 20 minutes, but presents tons of great information for any one interested in tax policy.

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