Summary

The IRS anticipates a $500 billion revenue loss as taxpayers increasingly skip filings following cuts from Elon Musk under Trump.

The IRS, set to downsize by 20% by May 15, has seen increased online chatter about avoiding taxes, with individuals betting auditors won’t scrutinize accounts.

Experts warned that workforce reductions could cripple the agency’s efficiency.

Treasury officials predict a 10% drop in tax receipts compared to 2024.

Former IRS commissioners have criticized the cuts, warning of dysfunction and reduced collection capacity.

  • teamshinanagin@lemm.ee
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    5 days ago

    And who would exactly make sure that you are not going over the amount of shirts to dodge the consumption tax? With no IRS and without 99% of the government I assume nobody???

    • shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip
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      5 days ago

      That’s a good point. Which is why it’s probably a better idea to just have the consumption tax apply to everybody equally instead of different levels, because otherwise you would end up creating a surveillance state. Well, not like we already don’t have one, but still, that’s a different story.

      If a poor person needs a new shirt, they will go buy a shirt and wear it until they can’t anymore. Whereas if a rich person goes, they will buy 10 shirts instead of just one. So the poor person gets hit with the consumption tax and the rich person gets hit with 10 times the consumption tax.

      A poor person would buy a car, say once every ten years, and pay the consumption tax one time, where a rich person goes out and buys ten really expensive cars, and not only pays the consumption tax on the car itself, but ends up paying an extreme amount more because of the branding of the car. The poor person buys a Honda Civic to get them to and from work, where the rich person buys a Bugatti.