The American scheme: pushing the tax envelope
(Page 2 of 2)
But prosecutions are critical to building faith in the IRS, according to former agency chief Charles Rossoti. Like an authoritative parent, the IRS must walk a fine line between maintaining respect and instilling fear. "If these problems and conditions are left unaddressed, we could face an enormous crisis in confidence in the tax system," Mr. Rossoti wrote in a report last year to the IRS Oversight Board.
There are signs that the system is already beginning to crack. Experts point to a huge proliferation of tax-shelter schemes over the past five years that increasingly push the envelope of legality. Among the most recent: efforts on the part of an estimated 2 million Americans to hide income in overseas credit-card accounts.
Creative circumvention of tax codes has become especially prevalent among corporate executives. A variety of accounting and tax laws restricting executives' pay have prompted many companies to find ways of supplementing their employees' income. "Companies are trying to be very artful in how they design programs to get around tax and accounting rules," says Paul Dorff, managing director of the consulting firm Compensation Resources.
More troubling, though, is the possibility that mainstream America has adopted an increasingly casual attitude about taxes, with middle-class taxpayers taking ever-greater risks to hide their income. In the past five years, say experts, many more companies have begun marketing offshore account services at prices affordable to those living in places like Milwaukee, not Monaco.
Their target customers are upwardly mobile professionals, like doctors and lawyers, who minimize their tax liabilities by investing in companies located in havens like Gibraltar, the Seychelles, and Bermuda. "Tax shelters have worked their way down the income ladder so that the middle-class can now afford them," says Professor Schenk.
There are signs that Congress and the IRS are responding to the abuse. The government is exerting more pressure on US corporations attempting to relocate to tax havens. And the Bush administration has called for a $133 million budget increase to boost by one-third the number of audits of unreported income, offshore accounts, and erroneous exemption claims. "Congress has suddenly realized the system doesn't work unless you enforce it," says Donald Alexander, who headed the IRS from 1973 to 1977.
Still, observers say the agency's greatest challenge could be convincing Congress to simplify the tax code itself. Many critics believe Americans increasingly are flouting the IRS because of their feeling that the code is too elaborate to be taken seriously. Daunted by official procedures, they invent their own. "The complexity of the code encourages noncompliance," says Walter Hellerstein, a law professor at the University of Georgia. "Things have to be made easier."
Page:
1 | 2




