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Complying with the federal tax code costs American taxpayers at least $100 billion annually, and lost economic efficiency associated with the tax system may top half a trillion dollars, auditors for the Government Accountability Office told Congress.In a report likely to add fuel to the campaign for an easy-to-administer national consumption tax, the GAO said that the lowest available estimates of the cost of complying with federal income, payroll and excise taxes is $107 billion - a whopping 1 percent of the nation's total gross domestic product. Other studies suggest that compliance costs may be 50 percent higher than these estimates.
October 23 -
A federal prosecutor asked a Los Angeles judge to deny bail to a former KPMG partner indicted in the government's tax shelter fraud case, calling him a flight risk.
October 20 -
With the President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform due to report Nov. 1, we asked industry leaders, many who made Accounting Today's recently released 2005 Top 100 Most Influential People list, to tell us what sort of tax system they would create.
October 20 -
Two proposals for tax reform took definitive shape at the latest meeting of the President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform. The panel's final report is due Nov. 1.
October 19 -
The Tax Policy Center, a nonpartisan joint venture of the Urban Institute and Brookings Institution, has established a new Web page dedicated to the President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform, providing a number of links to relevant research and testimony.
October 19 -
The Government Accountability Office said that the Internal Revenue Service should work with federal agencies to make sure companies follow rules prohibiting tax deductions for fines and penalties paid in civil settlements.
October 19 -
The American Institute of CPAs has released a nonpartisan tax reform report, titled, "Understanding Tax Reform: A Guide to 21 st Century Alternatives." The report is meant as an overview to understanding major issues in the debate over making changes to the country's system.
October 17 -
Gov. Phil Bredesen has told Nashville business leaders that he will not seek a state income tax if re-elected in 2006. Bredesen made the same promise before his first term, but had refused to extend the pledge as he campaigns for a second term.
October 16 -
The Internal Revenue Service could revoke the tax-exempt status of about 20 credit-counseling firms, just as the country's new bankruptcy laws are set to go into effect on Oct. 17.
October 13 -
With the President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform due to report Nov. 1, we asked industry leaders, many who made Accounting Today's recently released 2005 Top 100 Most Influential People list, to tell us what sort of tax system they would create.
October 13