Leslie Book of Villanova University School of Law, Keith Fogg of Tax Clinic at Legal Services Center of Harvard Law School, and Nina E. Olson of Center for Taxpayer Rights has made available for download their article, “Reducing Administrative Burdens to Protect Taxpayer Rights.” The abstract is as follows:
The tax system designed by Congress imposes significant administrative burdens on taxpayers. IRS decisions regarding how it administers tax laws can add to congressionally imposed burdens. The administrative burdens are consequential and hurt some people, especially lower- or moderate-income individual taxpayers, more than others. While the IRS strives to measure and reduce the time and money taxpayers spend to comply with their tax obligations, it does not consider the effect administrative burdens have on taxpayer rights, including the right to be informed, the right to pay no more than the correct amount of tax, and the right to a fair and just tax system. In this Article we discuss the concept of administrative burdens and reveal specific examples of how IRS actions, and inaction, have burdened taxpayers and jeopardized taxpayer rights. In addition to identifying and contextualizing these problems, we propose that the IRS conduct Taxpayer Rights Impact Statements on new and existing systems to evaluate when it would be appropriate to reduce, eliminate, or shift burdens away from citizens and onto the government or third parties.
To see the full article, click: “Reducing Administrative Burdens to Protect Taxpayer Rights”
Posted by Anthony Tran, Associate Editor, Wealth Strategies Journal