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Monthly Archives: November 2021

US Expatriations Rise In 3rd Quarter – Should I Stay or Should I Go?

As of the end of September, 980 people had expatriated from the U.S. since July, just over one-third more than the number from the second quarter of the year, the Internal Revenue Service said in a notice released Friday. 

This rise in expatriations in the last quarter builds on a rebound in the number of people losing or renouncing their U.S. citizenship in the second quarter after a series of decreasing expatriations that bottomed out at 228 people from January through March.

Expatriation Is The Term The IRS Employs For Loss Or Renunciation Of U.S. Citizenship Under Internal Revenue Code Section 877(A) And Section 877A, The Notice Said.


Expatriation has increased significantly in 2020. The latest U.S. Department of the Treasury Report reflects that a record 6,047 individuals expatriated during the first three quarters of 2020. In addition, 834,000 "green card" holders became U.S. citizens in FY 2019, which reflects an 11-year high.

Should I Stay or Should I Go?


Need Advise on Expatriation?

 


Contact the Tax Lawyers at 
Marini & Associates, P.A.   

for a FREE Tax Consultation contact us at:
www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com 
or 
Toll Free at 888-8TaxAid (888) 882-9243


Read more at: Tax Times blog

IRS LaunchesNew Online Tool To Help U.S. Withholding Agents Validate Their 1042-S Data Prior To Filing


The Internal Revenue Service today. You so much for lunch near Jacoby this Launched
a new online tool designed to help U.S. withholding agents comply with their reporting and withholding responsibilities with respect to IRS Form 1042-S (Foreign Person’s U.S. Source Income Subject to Withholding).

The tool performs a quality review of data before submission to the IRS. Use of the tool does not change a withholding agent’s obligations to file Forms 1042-S with the IRS and furnish a copy of the Form 1042-S to the payee.

“U.S. withholding agents play an important role in helping the IRS administer the tax code so we are delighted to be able to provide this tool free of charge to assist agents in meeting their filing requirement,” said Nikole Flax, IRS Large Business and International division commissioner.

In general, withholding agents, such as banks, insurance companies, universities, entertainment venues and resorts, or other financial institutions must file an information return on Form 1042-S to report amounts paid from U.S. sources to foreign persons. The definition of a withholding agent includes any person, U.S. or foreign, that has control, receipt or custody of amounts that are subject to the rules under Internal Revenue Code Chapter 3 (Withholding of Tax on Nonresident Aliens and Foreign Corporations) or Chapter 4 (Taxes to Enforce Reporting on Certain Foreign Accounts, i.e. FATCA or the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act). 

The tool is designed to accept Form 1042-S data in common file formats that can be generated by most withholding agents’ back office systems. After uploading the data, the user will receive a report indicating errors and potential errors. A tutorial on how to use the tool can be viewed online or downloaded.

Even though the tool identifies data errors, the withholding agent remains responsible for making changes to the data on the agent’s system of record before submission to the IRS.  The list of resources below will help agents understand and correct errors beforesubmitting the Forms 1042-S.

The tool can be used as many times as necessary on new or revised data. The IRS has no access to the users’ data. Use of the tool is voluntary, but the IRS will take into account a withholding agent’s use of the tool when making enforcement and penalty determinations. 

The IRS urges information reporting and withholding industry experts and withholding agents to share this critical information with any withholding agents that may benefit from using this tool.

Non-Resident Alien Withholding Resources

  • Form 1042-S, Instructions in PDF or HTML and any recent updates
  • Form 1042, Instructions in PDF or HTML and any recent updates
  • Publication 1187 (.pdf),Specifications for Electronic Filing of Form 1042-S, Foreign Person's U.S. Source Income Subject to Withholding
  • Publication 515, Withholding of Tax on Nonresident Aliens and Foreign Entities

Have an IRS Tax Problem?


     Contact the Tax Lawyers at

Marini & Associates, P.A. 


for a FREE Tax HELP Contact us at:
www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com
or 
Toll Free at 888 8TAXAID (888-882-9243)

Read more at: Tax Times blog

Commissioner Rettig Pens Op-Ed On The Importance Of Providing The IRS With Vital Funding

 

 

In case you missed it: IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig wrote a column that appeared in Thursday’s issue of The Washington Post. In the piece, Commissioner Rettig discusses the importance of providing the IRS with vital funding during the next decade and encouraged Congress to approve the $80 billion IRS funding proposal included in the Biden administration’s Build Back Better (BBB) plan.

The House Rules Committee on November 3 released the amended text of H.R. 5376, Build Back Better Act. As written, the IRS would receive approximately $80 billion in additional funding over the next decade. Specifically, the proposal would appropriate through September 30, 2031:

  • $1,931,500,000 for filing, education, account, and other taxpayer services;

  • $44,887,500,000 for enforcement, investigative, litigative, and digital asset monitoring and compliance activities;

  • $27,376,300,000 for supporting internal operations and expenses;

  • $4,750,700,000 for the agency's business systems modernization program designed to improve communications with customers; and

  • $15,000,000 for the development of a free "direct efile" tax return system.

The allocated amounts are on top of the usual IRS funding.

As Rettig writes in the piece, the IRS's workforce "is the same size as in 1970" and has "fewer than 15,000 people to handle" taxpayer phone calls. The shortage of auditors has resulted in a 60% drop in audits of taxpayers with over $1 million in annual income over the past decade.

According to Rettig, the funding boost would increase taxpayers' access to answers surrounding refunds, economic relief, and account-related issues. "We want to be able to answer the phones and respond to questions," Rettig writes. "But to do all this, we need help. We desperately need sufficient resources to be able to appropriately serve and support you and our country."

The IRS Also Lacks The Means To Adequately Hold
Wealthy Individuals And Large Corporations Accountable.
An Estimated 15% Of Taxes "Are Uncollected Each Year," Largely Because Of Personnel And Technological Gaps.

"Every American should agree that it is unacceptable for our nation's tax administrator to be 'outgunned' when appropriately challenging aggressive moves by some of the most sophisticated taxpayers."

The prospect of a well-equipped IRS seeking to close the "tax gap" which is, the difference between taxes owed and collected, by raising revenue collections has drawn the ire of some conservative groups and members of the banking industry.

Earlier this year, a squad of Republican notables, including former Vice President Mike Pence's chief of staff, created the Coalition to Protect American Workers in direct opposition to President Biden's tax agenda. In May, the group - through Building America's Future - released an ad against the IRS funding proposal.

"Biden's massive tax increase plan includes a staggering $80 billion to help recruit an army of IRS agents, agents aggressively coming for every dime they can grab at your house and our small businesses," the ad's narrator says before instructing taxpayers to urge Rep. Matt Cartwright, R-Pa., to reject the president's plan.

More recently, a Twitter campaign using the #KeepMyBankingPrivate hashtag has gained steam on the platform as financial institutions and related groups rally against a Treasury proposal that would require banks to disclose additional data on accounts with total annual transactions over $600.

To many opponents, giving the IRS more money would result in invasions of privacy, government overreach, and lengthy audits.

Have an IRS Tax Problem?

 

     Contact the Tax Lawyers at

Marini & Associates, P.A. 

 

 
for a FREE Tax HELP Contact us at:
www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com
or 
Toll Free at 888 8TAXAID (888-882-9243)
 

Read more at: Tax Times blog

The GOP Is Against Expanded IRS Auditing – No Surprise Here

According to Law360, a GOP push to counter President Joe Biden's plans to beef up oversight by the IRS has gained traction on Capitol Hill as House Democrats try to rally support for plans to give the agency more funding and enforcement authority.

Several senior Republicans said the party would try to build on a successful campaign by the GOP and stakeholder groups to push back against Biden's stalled plan to require banks to file tax information returns with customer account data. They predicted a strong effort in both congressional chambers in the coming days to oppose proposals in the House reconciliation bill, H.R. 5376, to upgrade Internal Revenue Service funding and expedite the enforcement of tax penalties.

A House floor vote on the measure, known as the Build Back Better Act, is expected to come after the Congressional Budget Office releases an analysis of its impact on the deficit. Some uncommitted centrists have said they plan to examine the pending CBO study and a recent analysis by the congressional Joint Committee on Taxation before deciding whether to seek changes and support the bill.

Proponents Have Said A $1.48 Trillion Package Of Income Tax Hikes In The Reconciliation Bill Would Cover Most Of The $1.75 Trillion Top-Line, Or Gross, Cost Of Funding Biden's
Priorities In The Legislation.


The Administration Has Argued The Rest of The Bill's Cost Would Be Covered Partly By Increased Revenue
From Expanded IRS Tax Enforcement.

It has projected that a $78.9 billion package of IRS funding in the bill would generate at least $400 billion in additional revenue to help finance Biden's priorities. The bill also includes a corporate minimum tax and other levies aimed at wealthy individuals, and it would help to finance green energy incentives and extensions of several temporarily expanded family incentives in the American Rescue Plan Act. 

But the additional revenue produced by the proposed expansion of IRS enforcement remains in dispute. Earlier this year, a CBO study found the IRS funding upgrade would produce $200 billion in revenue over 10 years, half the administration's current estimate. In a blog post in September, Phillip Swagel, director of the CBO, said the office's projection was based on an IRS estimate that every dollar invested in enforcement would produce a maximum return on investment ranging from $5 to $9.

However, a U.S. Department of the Treasury official said the package of IRS funding actually could raise more than $400 billion.

As Democrats lay the groundwork for a possible House floor vote, Republicans have questioned the need for more IRS funding and argued the return on investment for the upgrade would be less than expected.

Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, ranking member on the Ways and Means Committee, said he planned to focus on the potential for ordinary taxpayers to experience the negative effects of an expansion of IRS enforcement, with or without a new mandate for bank tax information reporting. The House bill provides that none of the IRS funding would be used to raise taxes on those earning less than $400,000, but it sets few other restrictions on the deployment of resources.

Rep. Drew Ferguson, R-Ga., the GOP's chief deputy whip and a member of the Ways and Means Committee, said Republicans hoped to work in tandem with centrist Democrats to push back against proposals to expand IRS funding and enforcement authority. He has promoted a plan, H.R. 5586, to bar Treasury from requiring banks to report on cash transfers in and out of customer accounts.

Whether that proposal advances or not, Neal said he was confident a major upgrade in IRS funding would make it into a final bicameral deal on the reconciliation bill. 

Have an IRS Tax Problem?


     Contact the Tax Lawyers at

Marini & Associates, P.A. 


for a FREE Tax HELP Contact us at:
www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com
or 
Toll Free at 888 8TAXAID (888-882-9243)

Read more at: Tax Times blog

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