More on tax simplification

Bob Formaini is a Senior Economist and Public Policy Advisor at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. In this TCS Central column, Mr. Formaini addresses a fundamental absurdity of the income tax system in the United States:

You might be wondering why, this year, my return has become something that, as I gaze on its small novel length, reads as if it were written in some foreign language. It’s simple. My wife and I are dealing with the death of her mom and an inheritance that involves two trusts, dozens of stocks, and three limited partnerships. I can understand the W2s okay. But the heart of my return is completely alien to me. I have no idea what it says or whether it is accurate. We have placed our fate in the hands of a very competent tax accountant, but even though his name is on the return along with ours, I remain somewhat uneasy signing a document that I can’t understand.

Then, Mr. Formaini addresses the real heart of the matter:

There is something wrong with a tax code that requires so much paperwork, so many hours of preparation, so much frustration with the endless record keeping that the law demands. And that’s just for individuals. The burdens on business are staggering. Even so, our return no doubt is, for our accountant, a baby sort of thing. I doubt that he even worked up a mild sweat. Compared with the returns he does for a living — a living created by Congress and their inability to have a simple tax code and for which I certainly do not begrudge him — our return is probably a laugher. And yet, to a guy like me with four college degrees including a PhD, it might as well be written in Klingonese. I have become, along with most of my fellow citizens, just another helpless dunce who can’t deal with the complexities that our wonderful politicians yearly serve up.

Which leads Mr. Formaini to a very provocative thought regarding this ludricrous situation that we have allowed our leaders to place us in:

The upside, assuming there is one, of being a helpless dunce is that one can no longer be held responsible. Unless Congress, “simplifying the tax laws” once more, decides that the old legal doctrine of mens rea is no longer the standard for criminal behavior. If that happens, were all potentially in some very serious trouble.

Amen.

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