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Biden's I.R.S. Doubled Audits on the Wealthy, Data Shows
Biden's I.R.S. Doubled Audits on the Wealthy, Data Shows

New York Times

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • New York Times

Biden's I.R.S. Doubled Audits on the Wealthy, Data Shows

It was a promise repeated many times by President Joseph R. Biden Jr.'s administration: The Internal Revenue Service would conduct more audits of wealthy Americans, but audit rates would not rise for households earning less than $400,000 per year. Mr. Biden and the Democrats made that pledge as they bolstered funding for the I.R.S., hoping that more enforcement aimed at wealthy tax evaders would generate revenue to pay for climate and health care programs. Republican lawmakers warned that more money for the I.R.S. would lead to more audits across the board, and that middle-class taxpayers would be targeted. But new data released by the I.R.S. last week suggests that the agency upheld Mr. Biden's promise in 2024. With an audit rate of 0.8 percent, people making over $500,000 on their latest return were more than twice as likely to be audited compared with the same point in the audit cycle in previous years. Audit Rate of Returns Filed the Previous Year Calculations based on the I.R.S. audit rate of returns filed the previous year. The overall audit rate for recent years could change in the future, since the I.R.S. has three years to open audits. Source: I.R.S. Data Books By The New York Times Meanwhile, the matching audit rate for taxpayers making under $500,000 declined slightly. The figures covered 2022 tax returns that were filed in 2023 and audited during the 2024 fiscal year, which ended Sept. 30. Note: Estimates are based on the 2019 tax year and reflect only closed audits. Numbers may change as more audits are completed. Tax rounded to the nearest hundred dollars. Includes both field and correspondence audits. Source: I.R.S. Annual Databook The New York Times Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Some Hong Kong reporters and news outlets are targeted by unwarranted tax audits, media group says
Some Hong Kong reporters and news outlets are targeted by unwarranted tax audits, media group says

The Independent

time21-05-2025

  • Business
  • The Independent

Some Hong Kong reporters and news outlets are targeted by unwarranted tax audits, media group says

Hong Kong 's tax authorities targeted at least 20 people, including journalists, current or former heads of media organizations and their families, with audits without sufficient evidence, a leading media professional group said Wednesday as it raised concerns over the city's press freedom. Hong Kong Journalists Association chairperson Selina Cheng said the Inland Revenue Department accused the affected companies and individuals of failing to fully report their income years ago and issued backdated tax demands. Cheng called some of the department's claims 'strange' and 'unreasonable." Cheng said the moves added stress to journalists and media organisations and affected their daily operations. 'It does have a negative effect on Hong Kong's press freedom,' Cheng told a news conference. ' Press freedom not only means the ability for media and journalists to operate safely, physically ... It also means the business environment, whether it is sustainable for them to operate.' In one case, the tax department alleged that a journalist had made a business registration and requested that they pay profit tax for a company they did not run — citing a business registration number that didn't exist, she said. The department also asked to audit a company's profit tax for a year before it was founded, she said. In an email to The Associated Press, the Inland Revenue Department said it has established procedures to review the information provided by taxpayers and that it will follow up on cases in which information shows a possible breach of rules. 'The industry or background of a taxpayer has no bearing on such reviews,' it said, declining to comment on any case. Hong Kong journalists have been navigating a narrowing space in recent years amid Beijing's crackdown on dissent following massive anti-government protests that rocked the city in 2019. Drastic political changes have created an increasingly restricted environment for them in the semi-autonomous Chinese city once regarded as a bastion of press freedom in Asia. In 2021, Apple Daily and Stand News, popular outlets known for their critical reports of the government, were forced to shut down after the arrests of their top management. Last year, two former editors of Stand News became the first journalists convicted under a colonial-era sedition law since the former British colony returned to Chinese rule in 1997. One received a 21-month jail term and the other was freed after his sentence was reduced because of ill health and time already served in custody. Pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai, Apple Daily founder, is still fighting national security charges that carry a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. In March 2024, Hong Kong enacted another security law that deepened fears over civil liberties and press freedom. The Hong Kong government insists that there are no restrictions on press freedom if journalists' reports are based on facts. In September, the journalists' association said dozens of journalists and some of their family members and associates were harassed in what it called the largest-scale harassment of reporters in the city that they are aware of. Cheng said the tax audits affected at least eight organizations, including independent media outlets like Hong Kong Free Press, alongside the Hong Kong Journalists Association and others. At least 20 people, including her and her parents, were also impacted, she added. Hong Kong was ranked 140 out of 180 territories in Reporters Without Borders' latest World Press Freedom Index, down from 80 in 2021, with its press freedom situation listed as 'very serious' for the first time.

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