Nothing special happened in 2010. Beginning 2018 there was a temporary change (TJCA) that increased the standard deduction, but that ends in 3 years unless extended by Congress.
>There are two groups of people who want to keep tax filing difficult.
No, there is a third, much larger group, of taxpayers who want to keep loopholes, grey areas, and little things you can cheat on and get away with. This is only possible with the current system.
> Nothing special happened in 2010. Beginning 2018 there was a temporary change (TJCA) that increased the standard deduction, but that ends in 3 years unless extended by Congress.
My understanding was that the personal exemption was temporarily removed, but the standard deduction was changed moving forward...but what do I know? I want the government to give me a default option that has a correct answer.
> No, there is a third, much larger group, of taxpayers who want to keep loopholes, grey areas, and little things you can cheat on and get away with. This is only possible with the current system.
Huh? All people are asking for is that the IRS fill out your 1040 for you as one option for paying taxes. No loopholes, grey areas, or enforcement changes. If you're talking about possible knock-on effects; people not paying attention to taxes, therefore paying more, or not paying enough attention that taxes get raised with out noticing--that's literally Grover Norquist's position.
You say a "much larger group." When California had a pilot program[1], the only opposition was from Intuit. "99 percent stated they were satisfied with ReadyReturn, 97 percent stated this is the type of service government should provide, 96 percent stated it was more convenient than how they filed in the past, 95 percent stated it saved them time, and 98 percent stated they would use it again."
>All people are asking for is that the IRS fill out your 1040 for you as one option for paying taxes. No loopholes, grey areas, or enforcement changes
Then how do you solve this scenario? Suppose my tax liability according to tax law in all its complexity is $1,000. However because it can't know everything, the IRS sends me an "optional" tax return with $800 liability, no questions asked, just sign here. What is to stop me from cheating in this case? It is only the risk of being audited that keeps most people somewhat honest under the current system.
So many countries already have it figured out. My understanding is by law income already needs to be reported to the IRS (from your employer or by you). I would imagine that's all you'd be legally signing off on. That's all I remember confirming when living abroad. If your income is accounted for correctly is there a scenario that would increase your tax liability assuming you already qualify for a standard deduction?
Nothing special happened in 2010. Beginning 2018 there was a temporary change (TJCA) that increased the standard deduction, but that ends in 3 years unless extended by Congress.
>There are two groups of people who want to keep tax filing difficult.
No, there is a third, much larger group, of taxpayers who want to keep loopholes, grey areas, and little things you can cheat on and get away with. This is only possible with the current system.