Originally posted by Ein~+ein
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160,000 new agents at an annual salary and benefits package worth $50,000 amounts to 8 billion dollars. Where will the money come from to meet their pay? Are you supposing that these agents will somehow be able to rake in way more than 8 billion dollars if they "go after the 1%?" That's wishful thinking, and here's why:
Nearly all of those who are in the top 1% have nothing that the IRS can "go after." Their wealth was legitimately accumulated, and the taxes on that accumulated wealth has already been paid, as are the taxes on newly earned income. The wealthy have tax lawyers and accountants who make sure that their wealthy clients pay what they are legally required to pay the IRS, and not a penny more. These lawyers and accountants help their clients to take advantage of every possible tax saving advantage while legally conforming to the tax code. No taxpayer wants to pay the IRS any more than what they are legally required to pay, and the tax code is intentionally set up to give the wealthy elite the best tax breaks. For example, most income for the wealthy elite comes from long term investments which have a tax burden that is only about half what hourly wage earners pay on their earned income. With some wise tax-free investments thrown in, such as in municipal bonds, "green energy," etc., the wealthy can easily lower their actual tax burden to 15% or less. Take Mitt Romney as an example. Mitt paid a rate of about 15% on income of about $20 million last year. Thus, Mitt paid about $3 million in taxes. That's quite a chunk no matter how you look at it. So the real question is whether or not you think he paid enough. I know that doesn't seem fair to those of us who have worked hard all our lives to scrimp and save for a modest retirement, while we were paying twice as much taxes per dollar earned than Mitt, but the tax code makes it all perfectly legal. Since Mitt didn't violate the tax code, and merely used it to his advantage, like all other wealthy people do, there is nothing more that the IRS can "go after." So why waste $8 billion on pay for 160,000 new IRS agents? That makes no sense whatever. We need to think in more positive terms, like eliminating the unnecessary and corrupt IRS altogether.
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