- In a Senate Finance Committee hearing,
IRS CommissionerCharles Rettig addressed the tax gap. - That's the gap between how much is owed in
taxes and what's actually collected. - Rettig said the gap could possibly exceed $1 trillion a year, far higher than the official estimate.
While the IRS' current official estimate of the tax gap - taxes owed but not collected - is $441 billion, the actual number could be a lot higher.
"I think it would not be outlandish to believe that the actual tax gap could approach and possibly exceed $1 trillion per year," IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig said in a Senate Finance Committee hearing on Tuesday.
Rettig also referenced a recent study by IRS researchers and economists looking at the top 1% of taxpayers, which found that "collecting all unpaid federal income tax from this group would increase federal revenues by about $175 billion annually." He said that study looked at just two things associated with the top 1% - pass-through entities and offshore income.
He also said the official tax gap estimate is from data that spans 2011 to 2013; things like virtual currency have sprung up since then.
Sen. Ron Wyden, the committee's chair, asked what the IRS could do with additional funds. Rettig said $1 billion could help the agency bring on 4,875 enforcement personnel; over the last decade, he said, they're down about 17,000 enforcement personnel, so that gap still realistically couldn't be filled for a year.
President
Wyden also asked if Rettig needed any changes in regulations or statutes. Rettig said he wants more information reporting.
Taxes - and who are and aren't paying them - have been a hot-button issue recently. Biden has been eyeing an increase to the corporate tax rate, and has also said that Americans making over $400,000 could see an increase.
There is also a myriad number of methods that the ultra-wealthy take to avoid their taxes, according to inequality expert Chuck Collins. A whole industry - what Collins calls the "wealth defense industry" - has ballooned around helping the wealthy hide their assets.