Talk:Tax noncompliance

Latest comment: 2 years ago by CapitanoPicard in topic Integration proposal

World wide view?

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The article is good and well written. But I think that the best title would be "tax avoidance and tax evasion in the US". For a european the article is pretty useless — Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.53.62.77 (talk) 17:12, 3 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

Tax protesters

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I'm not sure tax protesters should be here at all. There was a moral edge in the text about them which I have tried to neutralise. Psb777 04:19, 30 Jan 2004 (UTC)

Switzerland

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How can it be that in Switzerland, tax evasion is not considered a crime, whereas tax evasion is defined as "by breaking the law"? Is it not a crime to break the law in Switzerland??

And is it legal to "undeclare assets" for tax purposes there? Does anyone actually pay any tax at all in Switzerland??

simon 00:53, 23 Dec 2004 (UTC)

In a sense, using the term "tax evasion" is a bit misleading: most countries differentiate tax avoidance (legally reducing your tax liability) from tax evasion (illegally reducing your tax liability, including fraud), but the Swiss treat most tax transgressions as civil matters, so many acts that would amount to criminal tax evasion in other countries are treated as civil matters in Switzerland and are dealt with in the Swiss tax courts, not the criminal courts. Dishonestly underestimating or failing to report income in a tax return is not considered a crime, unless it amounts to tax fraud (e.g. deliberate falsification of records). [1][2][3] -- ALoan (Talk) 10:24, 23 Dec 2004 (UTC)


By definition it is only a crime to break the criminal code. So there is no contradiction. Tax evasion is not a crime in Switzerland even though the law is being broken. Similarly libel, in most jurisdictions, is not a crime. And trespassing is (was?) not a crime in England. Paul Beardsell 19:10, 23 Dec 2004 (UTC)


This easily won't work, at least for individuals in the United States.

IRS regulations require that individuals report all offshore accounts. If the IRS determines that the offshore accounts are used to control other entities, they can go after those other entities. Now it is true that offshore banks may not cooperate with the IRS in tracking down these assets, but the individual is still required by US law to report them.

One way to legally lower the tax due is to establish an independent entity in a tax haven to shelter an individual's income and assets along with an offshore bank account to control the entity's funds. Examples of such entities include an offshore company or corporation (such as an International Business Corporation or IBC), a foundation (such as a Panama Private Interest Foundation) or a trust.
Don't need to leave the USA. Just set up in Delaware. 86.140.37.171 (talk) 00:26, 30 October 2009 (UTC)Reply

Cheek v. United States

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There is already a Wikipedia article on this case and there is a link to it from the body of this article. Yet we now substantially repeat all the info in the Wikipedia article re this case in this article and we have material here about the case that is not in the Wikipedia article about the case. This is not the correct way of going about things and I suggest, as elsewhere in Wikipedia and as is considered good practice, that we reference the case here, give the quickest summary of its consequences to this article IF NECESSARY and place all info about the case in the article about the case. Paul Beardsell 05:40, 2 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

I disagree - there is bound to be a degree of redundancy in Wikipedia, and it would be difficult to talk about the way courts classify tax protester arguments without going into the details of Cheek, which is a seminal tax protester case wherein the Supreme Court basically sets out the final word on the topic, which continues to this day. Also, there's plenty of material in the Cheek article that is not found here. BD2412 T 12:32, 2 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

I overstated my case somewhat. I am not arguing for absolutely no redundancy but less redundancy than is shown on this particular issue. Further, I am not proposing radical new Wikipedia policy here but simply standard practice. If pushed I am sure I can find the references. But, forgetting all that (for the moment), surely you must agree that central facts about the Cheek case which appears here but not in the article on the Cheek case is not proper organisation of information? Paul Beardsell 20:54, 2 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

Now, to return to the issue of redundancy: Read this article and consider all the information which we could include here but which is referenced from here. This article would be very long indeed. The Cheek case, which is doubtless very important, is but one of a 100 important cases which should be referenced. And we haven't even considered the case law of non-US jurisdictions! Those inclusions, if documented to the same detail as the Cheek case, would then themselves bring up issues which would, by the example set here, require explanation here and thus further inclusions. No! That is just not the Wiki way. Create a separate article for the distinct issue. Refer to it. Paul Beardsell 20:54, 2 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

Redundancy of power supplies is good, redundancy of backups is good, redundancy of information is bad. Why? A major reason is that errors must then be corrected in two places. But, you know, I make the mistake of which I criticise this article: I repeat here what is well covered elsewhere in Wikipedia policy documents. Paul Beardsell 20:54, 2 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

Understood - I'll work on toning down the repetition to what is absolutely necesary to convey the state of the law. BD2412 T 20:59, 2 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

Of course, I ought not to be complaining about it, and relying on you to fix it: I ought to be working to fix it myself. I was anxious about undoing someone else's work but I should not appear to be so critical. Paul Beardsell 00:52, 3 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

Too much to chew

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I think the problem with this article is that it tries to cover too much - we should have seperate articles on tax avoidance (taking legal steps to reduce your tax burden), and tax evasion (taking illegal steps to do the same, including simply not paying what is owed). The former article could point out that tax avoidance is perfectly legal; the latter could point out that some acts claimed to be for avoidance are actually beyond the pale of the law. BD2412 T 03:03, 3 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

I agree: too much is now covered by this article. Doing what BD2412 suggests is a very good idea. I wonder, however, if this article might be kept solely for the purpose of contasting the four concepts (avoidance, evasion, resistance and protest) very briefly before referencing the 4 new articles BDA proposes. I.e. this article would have an introductory paragraph followed by strictly one short para on each of the 4 concepts. Each of the 4 paras would have a preceding link to the main article on the subject. Paul Beardsell 03:54, 3 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

I think that's exactly the right idea. BD2412 T 04:06, 3 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

But what should the quick-contrast/overview-article be called? How about "Not paying tax" or "Not paying taxes" or "Tax avoidance, evasion, mitigation, fraud, resistance and protest: Contrasted"? I am not really happy with any of them. Is it correct to consider all of these to be avoidance - just that most of them are illegal? I am not sure that would help, even if(!) correct. Paul Beardsell 22:01, 6 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

The initial paragraph gives a good general description of tax avoidance and evasion within the USA. Is the article intended to reflect the topic in only the USA? If so then it should be re-titled and everything after the intro should be confined to that context.Goodpaster 22:23, 19 August 2007 (UTC)Reply

What's outside the UK?

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In the UK, there is no General Anti-Avoidance Rule (GAAR)

Does this mean that in the rest of the world, there is, or is "the rest of the world" "The United States" here?

In other words, could we have some preemptive qualification of the U.S.-specific bits? I'm not demanding we immediately put in tax regulations from all other countries, mind you... JRM · Talk 00:54, 7 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

A correct quote from the current version of the article is "In the UK, there is no US-style General Anti-Avoidance Rule (GAAR), but ...". Paul Beardsell 01:52, 7 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

I still don't understand this. What is GAAR? It seems to be Canadian, not US. --anon

I agree. Needs explanation or removal. Paul Beardsell 04:15, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

How about something along the lines of "In the UK, unlike Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa, amongst others, there is no General Anti-Avoidance Rule (GAAR)"? -- Andrew 20 May 2006.

An odd sentence ?

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I'm not sure what this is supposed to mean: In the UK and elsewhere tax declarations of income from illegal activities are supposedly law enforcement organisations. It's english but does it make sense to you?

I added the original sentence but somewhere along the line it has become corrupted by the removal of a few words. The reason I added the sentence was because someone had added the possibly false and possibly off-topic discussion of tax returns being available to USA law enforcement agencies. I was making the point that this is not generally the case in the UK. In my view the enforcement of laws which have nothing to do with tax is off topic in this article and all about this needs to go. Paul Beardsell 04:13, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

How to categorize

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Tax evasion is a crime, but tax avoidance isn't. Would it make sense to categorize this article under category:crimes? Common Man 05:47, 6 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

I think so. Paul Beardsell 04:09, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Is tax delinquency a crime? How does that compare to tax evasion?

Felixcatuk (talk) 18:48, 28 July 2009 (UTC)Reply

Tax evasion means that you've actively tried to avoid paying a legal tax. There's lots of ways, but you were supposed to pay X taxes, but you set things up so you paid Y. That's evasion, and can result in criminal charges. Deliquency is when you've got your tax right, but you can't/didn't pay some or all of it. You'll get letters and calls, but it can eventually end up with liens, seizures, etc by the tax agency. If it goes through a court, it's a civil matter, not criminal. Ravensfire2002 (talk) 23:54, 28 July 2009 (UTC)Reply

reverting a muddying of the water

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The article now reads, in part:

The term "tax evasion" (or, more precisely, "attempted tax evasion") generally consists of criminal conduct, the purpose of which is to avoid the assessment or payment of a tax that is already legally owed at the time of the criminal conduct. By contrast, the term "tax avoidance" is used to describe lawful conduct, the purpose of which is to avoid the creation of a tax liability. Tax evasion involves breaking the law; tax avoidance is using legal means to avoid owing tax in the first place. An evaded tax remains a tax legally owed. An avoided tax is a tax liability that has never existed.

I have problems with this recent edit.

I am not sure that the use of the word "attempted" is correct. "Tax evasion" is illegal. "Attempted tax evasion" may also be illegal BUT this recent edit gives the impression that the tax is inevitably collected. No! As the Polly Peck affair shows: The money to pay the tax can be transferred overseas to an uncooperative jurisdiction. The tax evasion is not only attempted, it is successul.

Where does the "already legally owed at the time of criminal conduct" come from? Why is it in italics? This gives the impression that this is a commonly accepted definition. Which, I am sure it is not because the word "legally" would never be used. If it is owed it is legally owed. If it is not owed, legally, then it is not owed.

Tax avoidance is NOT _only_ (once again, italics used, why?) "avoid[ing] the creation" of a tax liability. It can also be the removing of an existing tax liability. E.g. the donation of a painting to a national gallery may remove an existing capital gains tax liability. So, "in the first place" is wrong. And "that has never existed" is wrong too.

The more closely and carefully the para is read the more wrong it most definitely is. So I am reverting. I am not saying that there is not room for improvement, just that this is NOT an improvement.

Paul Beardsell 00:29, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Also: I accept that often tax evasion is facilitated by not being having the tax assessed in the first place. But neither tax evasion nor avoidance has that a necessary prior step. Tax can be assessed and then evaded, as per the Polly Peck example already given. It can also be assessed and then avoided, as per the donated picture example already given. An assessment can be made and then successfully ignored - evasion. Or it can be assessed and then overturned or a reassessment can be caused - avoidance.

So, that edit reverted also.

Paul Beardsell 00:37, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Dear Paul Beardsell: I apologize for the confusion. I now realize that I, as an American, was writing without thinking about terms being used differently in Britain or other places. (I assume from your reference to the Polly Peck matter you are thinking of British tax law. I am definitely no expert on the Polly Peck matter or British tax law.)
My edits are summaries, for a typical non-tax expert, of what American law is. The American law (section 7201) specifically uses the words "attempts" -- as in "willfully attempts in any manner". Although "attempted tax evasion" is technically the more correct term (and section 7201 is entitled "Attempt to evade or defeat tax," not merely "Tax evasion"), learned American tax practitioners use the terms "tax evasion" and "attempted tax evasion" interchangeably.
From a technical legal standpoint you are actually correct, but your argument actually supports my edit: That is, the "attempted tax evasion" statute criminalizes both successful and unsuccessful evasion or "attempts" at evasion, regardless of how you want to phrase it.
I was trying to make clearer that section 7201 (as described later in the article) criminalizes even the mere attempt at evasion -- even if the attempt is unsuccessful (i.e., where the offender is caught and ends up having to pay the tax after all). I was also trying to make clearer, using non-technical language, that (under U.S. law) you cannot in general attempt to "evade" a tax unless it's already legally owed (with a possible class of exceptions I'll describe below), and that you cannnot generally legally "avoid" a tax unless it's a tax that has never been owed. These concepts are fundamental to an understanding of how the terms "evasion" and "avoidance" are used in American law. Based on my reading of the main article, I assumed (and I still believe) that the article is using those terms in the "American law" sense. (Perhaps that should be changed or clarified.)
I used at least one technical American tax law term ("assessment") without making clear its meaning (see below), and for that I apologize to everybody.
My comments about "already legally owed at the time of criminal conduct" were intended to make clear, through the use of emphatic redundancy, the difference between evasion and avoidance (as the terms are used in the article, and in America particularly). I was using redundancy in an attempt to avoid using technical legal jargon. I was trying to emphasize that there is no "tax" unless it's "legally owed." The article didn't seem to me to make that point adequately clear.
Tax avoidance in this sense is behavior that avoids (to be redundant again) having the tax liability be created at all. That's also what you were saying when you said "If it [the tax] is owed it is legally owed. If it is not owed, legally, then it is not owed." I just thought the article wasn't making that clear. Obviously my edits not only did not clarify enough, they muddied the water for you as you said.
The statement that one can remove an existing capital gains tax liability by donating a painting, etc., is incorrect, at least under American law, in the sense (again, to be emphatically redundant) of a "tax that is legally owed." If you give the painting away, there can be, as a general proposition, no "assessment" of tax with respect to the income you would have realized had you sold the painting instead. Therefore, there can generally be no "assessment and avoidance" merely by donating the painting to the gallery. (That is, you can have "avoided" the tax, but there would never have been any "assessment.")
In America, the term "assessment" as used in the case law interpreting the tax evasion statute refers to the statutory assessment under Subchapter A of Chapter 63 of the Internal Revenue Code. This assessment is performed by a duly appointed officer of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) who makes a formal entry on the books of the United States Treasury. For Federal income taxes, this formal act occurs only after the close of the tax year -- long after the painting in your example has been donated -- and long after the tax liability has arisen. In fact, this assessment is normally done after the related tax return is filed with the IRS -- long after the tax year has closed.
Now, the taxpayer could "avoid" some income tax he or she might have otherwise realized during the year (i.e., because the charitable contribution deduction for the donation of the painting would offset the taxpayer's income from wages or sales of other assets or other income, causing the income tax for the year to be lower than it would otherwise have been). One could also say that the taxpayer has "avoided" the tax that would have been incurred had the taxpayer instead sold the painting at a gain. These scenarios are consistent with the language of my edit. Under American law the Federal income tax liability arises at the close of the tax year, not earlier, at the time the income is realized. (Here, I am not talking about the liability for withholding taxes or the obligation to make interim payments of estimated tax -- I am talking about the actual Federal income tax liability imposed under Code section 1 in the case of individuals, section 11 in the case of corporations, etc.).
American income tax law is based on the concept of a "realization" event. Until you actually sell the painting or give it away, there is no tax -- for the simple reason that there is no realized income. However, even after the income realization event occurs, there is still no actual tax liability until one further event occurs -- the close of the tax year. This is because the tax is imposed on something called "taxable income" under section 63. The tax is not imposed on each individual realization of income during the year. It's imposed on what is essentially a legal and accounting concept ("taxable income") that cannot be defined until and unless the tax year closes.
All you have until you sell or otherwise dispose of an asset is an "unrealized gain." (And if you give the painting away to the gallery, there is a realization event but of course there is no income, as you received nothing in return.)
Also, my edit did not state that tax evasion or tax avoidance has "assessment" as a necessary step. I was trying to make clear (unsuccessfully, perhaps) a key point of American tax law -- that attempted evasion can be an attempt to evade the assessment (using the term as the U.S. statutes and courts use it), or it can be an attempt to evade the payment of a tax.
There are possible exceptions to the rules I've laid out. For example, I suspect that a taxpayer might be guilty (under U.S. law) of attempting to evade a Federal income tax that was not yet legally owed (for example, because the tax year had not yet closed) if the taxpayer were taking steps prior to the close of the tax year such as hiding the funds he or she realized in an income event. I would have to do a little digging in the case law to see if this is a real exception. As a practical matter, however, the taxpayer could never be prosecuted or even discovered until after the tax year had closed -- and by that time the conduct, the attendant circumstances, and the taxpayer's mens rea would have merged into a "complete section 7201 offense" (to use another emphatic redundancy) anyway.
American tax law is highly technical, with many exceptions, and is often difficult to explain to both tax practitioners and normal people, and I suspect the same may be true of the tax law of Britain and other nations. Much of your commentary is actually consistent with what I meant to convey, so I believe you are correct that I failed in my purpose on this edit. Yours, Famspear 06:23, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
Post script: Dear Paul Beardsell: Another reason that the term "attempt" is important is that the American courts have specifically interpreted "attempts" in section 7201 to require an affirmative act (comission) to find an offense; a mere failure to act, or omission (such as failing to file a return) is not sufficient for a 7201 conviction. This is also stated in the article, and is not really germane to your problems with my edit -- but I just wanted to point out that the requirement of an affirmative act is one of the elements that the prosecution must prove in a section 7201 case -- and that element comes from the word "attempts." Yours, Famspear 06:31, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
Post-post script: Dear Paul Beardsell: At the expense of appearing to beat a dead horse, I want to emphasize that your statement that tax avoidance (as the term "avoidance" is used in the article in the "American" sense) "can also be the removing of an existing tax liability" is thus incorrect. Once the tax "exists" (i.e., once it's legally owed), you cannot "avoid" the tax in the sense in which that term is being used in most of the article. My edits reflected accurate summaries of American law on the distinction between tax avoidance and tax evasion - albeit without an elaborate explanation of the attendant intricacies (some of which I addressed in my comments above). Yours, Famspear 08:05, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
If the term avoidance is used in this article is always used in some uniquely American sense then that would be a mistake in an encyclopedia meant for more than just American readers. But I dispute what you say: I have a enough understanding of UK, Australian, NZ and South African tax law to believe the avoidance / evasion distinction (legal reduction of tax bill / illegal non-payment of tax) is the same in all those jurisdictions. That the terms as used nowadays worldwide may have originated in the USA does not mean that only the USA position should be documented. It so happens that what the article said before the edits I reverted was valid in the USA. Paul Beardsell 11:08, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
All you are saying is that AS CURRENTLY ENACTED IN THE USA that TAX AVOIDANCE is IMPOSSIBLE AFTER ASSESSMENT. OK. But were it possible (or should it ever become possible in the USA in the future) it would be (or will be) called AVOIDANCE. And then the article would be wrong even for the USA, not only elsewhere. Paul Beardsell 11:08, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
For the sake of argument let us assume that what is tax law in the USA in this respect (that avoidance of an existing "assessed" tax liability is impossible) is true in every tax jurisdiction worldwide. Then I ask the question: Should there be a re-reading of the tax code, a new interpretation by the courts or an amendment to the tax code in the USA or somewhere else in the world such that after a particular example of a tax which has been "assessed" or billed or determined need not be paid should some declaration or promise or technical procedure be followed; then what would one call that behaviour by the taxpayer? It would be called avoidance. Paul Beardsell 11:08, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
So, I don't care what the detail of USA tax code is: Just because such a declaration / promise / procedure is currently impossible in the USA once the tax has been "assessed" does not mean that tax cannot be avoided elsewhere (or possibly at some time in the future in the USA) after the tax bill has been sent by the taxman to the taxpayer. Paul Beardsell 11:08, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
There are examples in UK tax law where one can elect years after a tax bill has been received and even paid to claim a status and either not pay the tax or have paid tax refunded or to have one tax substituted for another, tus avoiding tax. E.g. In some circumstances it takes some time after emigration before the UK Inland Revenue will accept that one is no longer "ordinarily resident" in the UK. But when this is established (three tax years later), the three years' tax due, assessed and paid after emigration but while one's official residence status is unclear is refunded. Should the emigration have been so as to pay less tax then the tax saved would be avoidance, not evasion. Paul Beardsell 11:08, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
We make a mistake in trying to document the specific, tax code of any one tax jurisdiction in this article. We need to say in general terms what tax avoidance is and what tax evasion is, to contrast the two in such a way that the reader will have the necessary information at hand to distinguish between the two in any tax regime, even if the details of that tax regime are not known to the writers of this article. Paul Beardsell 11:08, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
That is why I say the water was muddied. Clear principles were substituted by a detailed expose of some particular and peculiar aspects of one of the world's many tax codes. Paul Beardsell 11:08, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
I suggest the detail you want to add is required at Wikipedia but in a US specific sub-section or in a different article. Paul Beardsell 11:08, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Dear Paul Beardsell: Yes, I pretty much agree with the thrust of your comments. The article should keep a world-wide view (not be limited to American law).

When you say you're "disputing" what I say, I'm not sure what you mean, because it appears we're mostly in agreement now -- in particular, that the term tax "avoidance" is apparently used differently in different jurisdictions, and that my edits did not take that into account.

I like your statement: "We need to say in general terms what tax avoidance is and what tax evasion is, to contrast the two in such a way that the reader will have the necessary information at hand to distinguish between the two in any tax regime, even if the details of that tax regime are not known to the writers of this article." However, because of the variances among different countries I don't know if we can accomplish this goal by making only general statements that will supposedly apply to all nations' laws. This tactic might work for some topics, but perhaps not for something like tax law.

Instead, I think it would be more helpful to expand the number of specific examples from the laws of a few other nations. The detailed illustration of the application of section 7201 of American law, which has been in the article for some time, is I believe very helpful. (Granted, I may have written it myself, so perhaps I have a bias.) Perhaps you and some of the other editors who are familiar with the laws of other countries can show how the terms are used differently. The article as currently written may be too "America-centric." I think the article can be improved by adding a few more contrasting examples, not by removing the American perspective that has been there for some time.

Regarding my recent, specific edits that you reverted, I generally agree with you, and I don't want to add my edits back to the article. The fact that you had so much of a problem with them might mean that other readers would have the same problems as well. Thanks for your constructive criticism. Yours, Famspear 16:42, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Post script: Dear Paul Beardsell: Maybe we can work together on some language that improves the article. (I just can't work on it right now.) I also agree that any language on U.S. law, if added back, should be in a "US specific sub-section," or in a different article (if this one just gets to be to long, etc.). I'll get back to you, hopefully maybe later this week. Right now I have a March 15th tax deadline with which I must deal. Yours, Famspear 17:42, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Dear Paul Beardsell: Well, now I see where my edits have apparently been restored to the article a couple of times. I just can't deal with this right now, but I've got a pretty good idea for some modifications to the language that might allay your concerns. I'll try to get to it soon. Yours, Famspear 20:15, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Dear Paul Beardsell: OK, I've left the restored edits in, but I have made some modifications in an attempt to clarify where the discussion is really dealing with United States law - as well as a clarification on where the UK regime (as opposed to "worldwide" concepts) is really being discussed. This should be a start. See what you think. Maybe you or some other editors familiar with the UK model of evasion-avoidance can elaborate in the discussion on the UK. Yours, Famspear 20:54, 13 March 2006 (UTC)Reply


Famspear, have you read the "too much to chew" section above? I continue to worry that the overview is lost. We have anecdotes, we have detailed exposition of highly technical matters of US Law - detail belonging to a legal text book rather than an encyclopedia. Or, if it does belong here, it must make way for the general principles. I would rather cull than add material but, understandably, editors are hostile to the loss of their carefully crafted work. So, I ask: What do you think of the suggestion in "too much to chew"? Paul Beardsell 12:25, 14 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Dear Paul Beardsell: Yeah, I would tend to agree with BD2412's ideas. I don't have time to really deal with Wikipedia much today, so you might want to consider taking a shot at it. Yours, Famspear 18:17, 14 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
Construction, not destruction: The info you have added is (in my [should possibly be a little more] humble opinion) interesting and useful. It seems the constructive editors here are agreed: (i) that the more info the merrier, (ii) that a plain and simple introduction avoiding country specifics is desirable and (iii) some reorganisation work is required. A separate section for each country with notable differences from the most common features of tax evasion and avoidance law is, I think, desirable. The newly rewritten and improved Switzerland info is an early candidate for that. Although I think it best if eventually the "too much to chew" suggestion, above, is implemented. Paul Beardsell 04:28, 20 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Statutory assessment in the United States

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Dear fellow editors: I see that a small edit war has been going on regarding the following language:

(or, in jurisdictions such as the United States, the payment or statutory assessment) of taxes by illegal means.

The language in the parentheses is language that I added a few days ago. If it will stop the edit war, I would like to suggest that my language be left out of the article. Although the language is correct, the same point is covered further down in the article, in the discussion about U.S. law. Hopefully this will be acceptable to everyone. Yours, Famspear 18:02, 19 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

I agree. The info is useful - I just think we must keep the intro to these various topics simple and expand later in the article. Paul Beardsell 04:31, 20 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Keynes quote

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I deleted the Keynes quote "The avoidance of taxes is the only intellectual pursuit that carries any reward." Although this is often attributed to Keynes, I have never seen a source given. More importantly, it does not say anything important about tax avoidance (though it does say something relevant about other intellectual pursuits). James Kessler

Criminal vs. civil

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I am interested in expanding the tax evasion page (or having a separate section) that is about the different parts of tax evasion that the US (I'm concentrating here on federal tax evasion) generally brings criminal actions and civil actions for. For example, as the article states, if someone omits certain assets or earnings that he has, and therefore evades taxes (and does so knowingly), I was told that the US will rarely if ever bring a criminal action against the person, even though this is a crime. This is because the person will simply say that his tax return stemmed from his own interpretation, and the prosecutor will obviously have a very hard time showing that there was willful evasion. So, although this kind of tax evasion is crime, it is rarely litigated as crimes - rather, the US will litigate it civilly, and will litigate it basically being a debt owed, rather than a crime committed, if that makes sense. I was wondering if people know anything about this, and also whether people know of good sources for these issues.

I am also interested in what kinds of tax evasion are actually crimes. For example, not filing a return at all is a crime, but I was told that filing a tax return in full and simply not attaching a check is not a crime. Even if you attach a note saying I owe this taxes, but sorry, I'm not paying it, it's still not a crime. I'm pretty sure that this is wrong, note or no note (or rather, it is a crime if this is done knowingly, and clearly with the note, it is knowingly committing evasion). Any confirmation? Also, say the note is included and it is counted as a crime. Will the US pursue a civil or criminal action, in the typical case?

It would really help me out if some knowledgeable person could at least address these issues on the talk page if not add something to the article.

[Note: Above comments added by Borntostorm on 15 September 2006]

Wow, very interesting comments and ideas from Borntostorm. Stay tuned! Yours,


Famspear 00:48, 16 September 2006 (UTC)Reply



Peter Reilly 01:42, 17 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

United States tax crimes are in Sections 7201 to 7217. Failure to pay or report is criminal only if it is "Willfull". This has been the source of tax payer victories. In protester literature you will find reference to the Cheek case which ruled that "good faith" belief in invalidity of laws, even though unreasonable negated willfullness. It is important to note that all this would do is keep Cheek out of jail if he could convince a jury he actually believed that nonsense, not prevent his property from being seized.

If you check out the website for the IRS Criminal Investigation Department you will see that not very many people get criminally charged under the tax laws each year. Its in the hundreds not thousands. There is a group that advocates paying what would be your taxes to a not for profit as an act of civil disobedience (These people are clearly saying that they know they are breaking the law). Apparently they have been doing it a long time with no prosecutions.

There is a procedure called "offer in compromise" that will allow you to pay less than what has been assessed (These are the source of those commercials about paying your taxes for cents on the dollars), based on ablility to pay. If you file a return there is a three year statute of limitations on them changing the amount of tax (The three years become six if there is substantial understatment of income). What I wasn't aware of all that much was that there is a ten year statute of limitations on collections. Even though you know you owe it and they know you owe it - no question about validity of the assessment - after ten years of not paying you are home free.

A recent development is that if you send in an offer in compormise and it is not acted on within two years it is deemed accepted.

Basically if you don't want to pay there is a fairly good chance that you will get away with it particularly if you can by without owning property or having bank accounts. If there are assessments though at some point they will make your credit score really suck.

There is a sense in which the protesters are right that the IRS is bluffing to some extent. Not because they don't have the law on their side, but more because they don't have a lot of resources relative to the job they have. Congress might not want to repeal the estate tax, but that doesn't prevent the administration from laying off half the IRS attorneys who work on estate taxes.

I read a GAO report which indicated that IRS CID keeps getting dragooned into fighting other types of white collar crime. The problem is that there is no other federal law enforcement agency for tax crimes.

[End of 17 September 2006 comments by editor Peter Reilly]

Yes, I think the number of tax convictions each year runs only about two or three thousand nationally. That is a very low number if you think about it.
Although tax investigations are handled by the Criminal Investigation division of the IRS, the prosecutions are handled by the Department of Justice (DOJ) -- which is very picky about which cases it will prosecute. About half the cases referred to DOJ by the IRS are actually accepted. However, of those that are accepted, a fairly high percentage (I think above 80%) result in convictions. And if you're convicted, there is a high probability you will do at least some jail time.
In the Cheek case, the Court actually ruled that a good faith believe in the invalidity of the tax law (i.e., a good faith belief that the tax law is unconstitutional) is not a valid defense to willfulness (i.e., does not negate willfulness). Indeed, the Court seemed to indicate that evidence that the taxpayer had argued that the tax law is invalid might actually help prove willfulness -- might actually show that the taxpayer is AWARE of the tax law. However, the Court also ruled that a good faith belief that, for example, "wages are not income" -- because of a misunderstanding of the tax law itself (as opposed to a belief that the law is invalid) WOULD be a valid defense, even though that good faith belief is irrational or unreasonable. However, as in any criminal case, the jury (not the defendant) makes the determination as to whether the defendant actually believed what he claims he believed.
I think the point about the IRS bluffing is well taken. The tax laws are valid -- but IRS audits of income tax returns generally run around 1% of filed returns per year (give or take). Criminal prosecutions are very low, as editor Peter Reilly has noted. The IRS relies mainly on taxpayer honesty and to a lesser degree on taxpayer fear of getting caught cheating. The chances of getting caught cheating are often relatively low. Yours, Famspear 01:45, 19 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

Dear fellow editors: Regarding the comments above by editor Borntostorm, my sense (with no data, however, to back it up yet) is that Borntostorm is correct that the U.S. government rarely brings a criminal action against someone for omitting earnings -- but that this is not because of the difficulty of overcoming the taxpayer’s interpretation in showing willful evasion. If you can prove the taxpayer omitted income from the return, I'd argue that it could be a lot easier to convince the jury that the omission was willful than it would be to persuade the jury that, say, a deduction taken by the taxpayer was taken with willful intent to evade taxes. I think most members of the average jury pretty much know that when you receive income, it's probably taxable. If you leave income off a return, your own "interpretation" that it's not taxable doesn't leave you much wiggle room if you find yourself facing a jury of taxpayers.

The reason that tax crimes (including willful omission of income cases) are seldom prosecuted is simply lack of resources. The Department of Justice has other priorities, and therefore prosecutes only those cases with (1) a high probability of success, (2) relatively larger amounts of taxes involved, and (3) the possibility of lots of good publicity for the government (e.g., famous people, politicians, etc.) upon conviction (for example, Leona Helmsley or Irwin Schiff). All this is an oversimplification, and I have no data at my fingertips right now to back it up, but this is my sense of how it has worked over the years.

Regarding Borntostorm’s other questions, filing a tax return in full and “simply” not attaching a check (not paying on time) is not a crime -- as long as your failure to timely pay was not willful. If you just didn’t have the money one year, a jury might well conclude the failure to pay wasn’t willful – so maybe the government would be less likely to prosecute. However, if you do that every year – i.e., every April 15th for upteen years in a row, you file a return but you “just don’t have the money” and you do that over and over and over, weellllll.....

Again, if you’re charged criminally, a key issue is going to be whether the prosecutor can persuade the jury (and the key word is “persuade,” not “prove”) that you acted willfully. In American law, “proof” really means “persuasion.” In fact, the ultimate burden of proof is actually called that: the burden of persuasion (e.g., beyond a reasonable doubt, in a criminal case).

Again, I don’t have anything right here at my fingertips to back up these comments at the moment – it’s just my thoughts. Stay tuned. Yours, Famspear 02:48, 19 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

Just from a business analysis, I would say that the IRS rarely brings prosecutions because what it wants is the money. The threat of prosecution is a very effective collection technique, but only if people know they can avoid prosecution by paying up. If the IRS started prosecuting people who paid up promptly after being caught, they would lose a lot of leverage. If the taxpayer is willing to enter into a payment agreement, threat of prosecution is an incentive to comply; actual prosecution would consume the taxpayer's resources and few people can earn a lawful living from jail.
I would also suspect that the most frequent case of unreported-but-documentable income is easily explained as carelessness: the forgotten savings account in another state, the lost 1099 for $52.78, the seasonal job that paid one check in January. There is no reason to prosecute these petty oversights: it may even be overkill to levy a negligence penalty.
My understanding of ten-year statute of limitations on collection is that it stands in lieu of bankrupcty: while the bankruptcy court cannot relieve taxes due the United States, there is little social value in pursuing an indigent taxpayer to the grave. What I am not sure is whether any payment or successful partial collection renews the period. Robert A.West (Talk) 11:02, 19 September 2006 (UTC)Reply
Yes, you can pretty much bet that the government is not going to prosecute someone for evading relatively small amounts in tax. And merely willfully filing returns late, and willfully paying taxes late, while criminal offenses, will USUALLY not result in a prosecution where the taxpayer "voluntarily" comes back into the system and files the returns before the IRS gets really hot on the trail of the taxpayer.
Although it's a bit difficult, some Federal income taxes actually are dischargeable in bankruptcy. I don't think a payment, etc., "renews" the 10 year period. What does happen is that certain events -- like bankruptcy -- can "toll" or "halt" the running of the time period, so that the actual statutory period -- from the date of assessment to the date on which the allowable collection period expires -- ends up being more than 10 years. In other words, as long as the section 362 automatic stay (11 U.S.C. § 362; see Bankruptcy in the United States) is in effect with respect to collection actions against the taxpayer, the running of the statute of limitations is also stopped. Once the taxpayer receives a discharge (or the automatic stay is otherwise lifted with respect to the tax liability), the time period starts running again. Yours, Famspear 16:27, 19 September 2006 (UTC)Reply
The problem is that even within a country, whether an action is a crime or not changes under different governments. What was once legal could become illegal overnight, and vice versa. It gets even worse. For example there is now in the UK what is known as a civil penalty. That is you can get a fine for committing no crime, with fines as high as £10,000 (US$16,000). Crazy isn't it? 86.140.37.171 (talk) 01:02, 30 October 2009 (UTC)Reply
Remember Enron? Were they paying taxes on the billions they were supposed to be making (not making)? If they weren't paying the correct taxes on the supposed profits, why did the US government not started legal actions sooner? 86.149.254.227 (talk) 16:36, 3 November 2009 (UTC)Reply

Fifth Amendment

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Dear fellow editors: I changed the following passage:

In the United States, persons subject to the Internal Revenue Code who earn income by illegal means (gambling, theft, drug trafficking etc.) are required to report unlawful gains as income when filing annual tax returns (see e.g., James v. United States, 366 U.S. 213 (1961) as vs. Commissioner v. Wilcox), but they usually do not do so, because doing so would serve as an admission of guilt. Disregarding the Fifth amendment (The U.S. Constitution forbids compulsion of a witness to testify against themself.), suspected lawbreakers, most famously Al Capone, have been charged with tax evasion when there is insufficient evidence to try them for their substantive crimes. By contrast: In the UK law enforcement agencies do not generally have access to tax returns and so immoral or illegal earnings can supposedly be safely declared.

I changed it to read as follows:

In the United States, persons subject to the Internal Revenue Code who earn income by illegal means (gambling, theft, drug trafficking etc.) are required to report unlawful gains as income when filing annual tax returns (see e.g., James V. United States but they often do not do so, because doing so could serve as an admission of guilt. Suspected lawbreakers, most famously Al Capone, have been charged with tax evasion when there is insufficient evidence to try them for their non-tax related crimes. By contrast: In the UK law enforcement agencies do not generally have access to tax returns and so immoral or illegal earnings can supposedly be safely declared.

The removed verbiage about the Fifth Amendment, at least in that grammatical form, seemed to convey the implication that charging people with tax crimes when there is insufficient evidence to try them for their "substantive" crimes is somehow "disregarding" the Fifth Amendment (regarding a person's privilege against being compelled to be a witness against himself or herself). That would obviously be incorrect.

Perhaps the language was added to the article to say something different and, if so, maybe a clarification is needed.

I also made a few minor edits such as changing "substantive" to non-tax related." The term "substantive" in the United States conveys a different legal meaning than "non-tax related" and "non-tax related" fits better in this context. Yours, Famspear 02:42, 18 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

I have heard it alleged, and used to take as fact, that there is (or was) a so-called "Capone rule" that since one is required to file a truthful and complete tax return that information on the return is not admissable to prove any crime other than one related to the duty to file (e.g. tax evasion or perjury). While this seems sensible, I can find no evidence of any such rule.
  1. Has any defendant raised such an argument in a non-tax prosecution either to exclude the tax form itself, or to exclude other evidence as fruit of the poisonous tree?
  2. If so, has it ever been successful?
  3. Is it relevant to tax enforcement whether a business is legal or illegal? In other words, is there any case where a taxpayer truthfully reported the amount, but not the character, of his illegal income and was prosecuted for filing a false return?
Just curious. If the answers are known, they might make an interesting paragraph. Robert A.West (Talk) 14:55, 18 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

Dear Robert A. West: There is no such rule. In the Garner case a defendant was convicted of a crime unrelated to Federal taxes, and the prosecution used incriminating information the taxpayer had included on his Federal income tax return. The conviction was upheld. Here's the excerpt from the article on Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution:

In Garner v. United States, 424 U.S. 648 (1976) the defendant was convicted in connection with a conspiracy to "fix” sporting contests and to transmit illegal bets. During the trial the prosecutor introduced, as evidence, the taxpayer's Federal income tax returns for various years. In one return the taxpayer had showed his occupation to be “professional gambler.” In various returns the taxpayer had reported income from “gambling” or “wagering.” The prosecution used this to help contradict the taxpayer's argument that his involvement was innocent. The taxpayer tried unsuccessfully to keep the prosecutor from introducing the tax returns as evidence, arguing that since the taxpayer was legally required to report the illegal income on the returns, he was being compelled to be a witness against himself. The Supreme Court agreed that he was legally required to report the illegal income on the returns, but ruled that the privilege against self-incrimination still did not apply. The Court stated that "if a witness under compulsion to testify makes disclosures instead of claiming the privilege, the Government has not 'compelled' him to incriminate himself."
Sullivan [a case where the Supreme Court ruled that the Fifth Amendment does not allow a taxpayer to refuse to file a Federal income tax return] and Garner are viewed by some legal scholars as standing, in tandem, for the proposition that on a required Federal income tax return a taxpayer would probably have to report the amount of the illegal income, but might validly claim the privilege by labeling the item "Fifth Amendment" (instead of "illegal gambling income," "illegal drug sales," etc.)

On the separate question of whether there is any case where a taxpayer truthfully reported the amount, but not the character, of his illegal income and was prosecuted for filing a false return -- I'll have to do some digging on that. Off the top of my head I would say that the rule is that you have to be truthful on the return as to the description of the income (not just the amount) OR you have to report the amount with a notation such as "FIFTH AMENDMENT," or some similar notation that makes it clear you are asserting the privilege as to that particular item on the return. If you lie and call it "catalog sales" when it's really "illegal drug sales" then you can technically be convicted of willfully filing a false return -- even if the amount is correct and even if the tax is correct, etc. But I'll have to look and see if there are any actual reported cases. Yours, Famspear 19:16, 18 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

Thanks. I didn't think to look over in the Fifth Amendment article. Robert A.West (Talk) 20:58, 18 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

Dear Robert A West: You're welcome. Also, I did some looking around and found this: A leading case where the taxpayer truthfully reported the amount but lied about the source is United States v. DiVarco, 484 F.2d 670 (7th Cir. 1973), cert. denied, 415 U.S. 916 (1974). In that case, the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ruled that under 26 U.S.C. § 7206, although the defendants had not understated their income, the SOURCE of the income (about which they had lied on their Federal income tax returns) was a "material matter," and that misstatement of the source of the income was criminal under section 7206. Criminal convictions upheld.

Basically, the concept is that the IRS is entitled to accurate information on the tax return, even if the income (and tax) are properly stated. Source of income is a "material matter." Yours, Famspear 21:18, 18 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

Just as an aside, I have seen a few people argue (I don't recall if it was here in Wikipedia, or somewhere else) that because a particular statute required an individual to provide information (e.g., Federal income tax return) and criminalized the failure to provide that information, or criminalized lying on the report, that somehow the statute would be "unconstitutional" as violating the Fifth Amendment. Obviously that is false. There are gazillions of statutes that require honest reporting to the government, and criminalize willfully filing false information. This does not violate the Fifth Amendment. The key word here is "assert." You have to ASSERT your Fifth Amendment privilege ON THE RETURN OR REPORT ITSELF in order to obtain the legal protection. Those who simply report the truthful information -- thereby failing to assert the privilege -- are not being "compelled" for purposes of the Fifth Amendment (although they are in a sense being compelled for purposes of the underlying criminal statute). If you don't CLAIM the privilege, you have not been "compelled" and you aren't protected. Further, the government is under no legal obligation to tell you this in the instructions for the tax forms, etc. Tricky tricky stuff, eh? Yours, Famspear 21:27, 18 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

I suspect that teachers cause a lot of this, by emphasizing that our rights derive from the Constitution, whereas the Framers thought more in terms of protecting certain pre-existing rights that were especially important or vulnerable. Its a subtle distinction (and Judge Bork would disagree with what I just said), but I think it is important. Thus, some business books attribute the requirement that a non-competition agreement be reasonable to the 13th Amendment. While such agreements could at some extreme constitute indentured servitude, that is not the legal doctrine involved. Similarly, the need to administer the tax laws is obvious, and limited use immunity would seem a natural way to compel truthful and complete answers, so some teacher or writer drew a connection where none existed.
The needs of fiction also tend to create misunderstandings. More than one film has misused "double jeopardy" to create a dramatic situation: X pretends to be dead, and Y is convicted of X's murder. Y gets out of jail and goes after X, immune from threat of prosecution. It makes a good revenge motif, but people tend to assume that what they see in a film is how things are.
Given limited resources, one wonders why the IRS bothered prosecuting in the DiVarco case, since they seem to have gotten the correct amount of tax. And I would suspect that it is unlikely to prosecute any grey area. IIRC, Sydney Biddle Barrows filed business returns under an "Entertainment Services" SIC code, and I have never heard of her being prosecuted for filing a false return. If your hypothetical drug dealer actually owned a catalog sales business and used its premises for his illegal business, would it be a false return simply to include the income? What if it were a pharmacy? Does a physician who writes prescriptions-to-order need to break out that part of his business income? Since criminals are greedy, I imagine the number who report illegal income is few, but it is an interesting thing to think about.
I take it from your phrasing above that there is no reported case of a person's asserting the privilege, neither because the IRS wanted to compel a more specific answer, nor because of a subsequent prosecution that the defendant asserted arose out of asserting the privilege. Robert A.West (Talk) 10:02, 19 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

Well, you raise an interesting question -- basically one of "completeness" of the description of the "source" of the income. How "complete" does your "complete" description have to be to be really "completely complete" for purposes of the statute? I mean, few would argue that the Sydney Biddle Barrows services were "entertainment," so how much MORE detail does she really have to go into? Same question for "drug sales" -- do you really have to say "illegal" drug sales? I don't know.

The answer may be that there is simply no rule. Here's why: The question deals with the "material matter" element of section 7206. The queston of whether the disclosure on a given return is sufficient for purposes of the "material matter" element is probably a question of fact, not a question of law. In a jury trial, questions of fact are decided by the jury, not by the judge. Therefore, there really is no "rule" -- it's a "case by case basis" determination, with each jury making its own determination (or, if the defendant requests a "trial to the bench" -- i.e., with no jury and with the judge acting as the trier of fact -- with each judge making his or her own determination). So, that leaves the taxpayer to ponder the probabilities as he prepares his return.

Is there a reported case of someone's having asserted the privilege? Well, there are several cases of people who have improperly asserted the privilege. For example, some tax protesters refuse to file a return and claim the privilege (that tactic does not work), and others who prepare and sign a form with no information, claiming the privilege as to the entire return (that doesn't work). To properly claim the privilege, you have to claim it as to a specific line or item on the return. I don't recall any cases where people have properly claimed the privilege, but there certainly could be some. Stay tuned. Yours, Famspear 20:46, 20 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

recent addition re Canada "profitable philanthropy"

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I have removed this recent addition to the article:

In Canada, there has been a tradition among the elite to buy the best advice possible to mitigate taxation to it's fullest, leaving the masses to fill the gap with their hard-earned income taxes. Recently, several tax shelter programs have been created by the same minds that offer the elite all their tax free options. Although Canada's Revenue Department is unhappy about these 'schemes' they are not illegal and year after year, tens of thousands of Canadian taxpayers reduce their income tax bill significantly, often to zero.
This is often accomplished through "leveraged charitable gifting" arrangements whereby dollars gifted to charities by the taxpayer are matched or leveraged three to one... the taxpayer is entitled to the charitable receipts for their cash gift AND the leveraged gift, resulting in a net gain as much as 200% of the donation amount. It is also refered to as profitable philanthropy which recent Canadian Supreme Court cases have repeatedly allowed and encouraged. www.smarttaxstrategies.com has more information with which to educate oneself.

This is not expressed in neutral language and was inserted too early in the article. Perhaps the author would care to re-work it and re-insert in a more appropriate place. Paul Beardsell 07:45, 16 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

Dear editors: An anonymous user keeps introducing the materials referenced above with little or none of the revision suggested by editor Psb777 (Paul Beardsell). I have removed the materials again. These materials are unsourced and therefore unverifiable. The verbiage also seems to push a particular point of view and obviously is objectionable in that it contains a blatant advertisement for a commerical web site pushing "more information with which to education oneself". Yours, Famspear 04:46, 18 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

Dear fellow editors: OK, I now see that the material may have originally been inserted on 16 December 2006 at [4] by an anonymous editor at IP 142.161.145.36. Thanks to editor Psb777 (Paul Beardsell) for setting me straight. Yours, Famspear 15:39, 18 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

Tax protester rhetoric

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An anonymous user has repeatedly inserted the following material:

Many individuals, however, argue that the average American worker is not legally obligated to pay a Federal income tax, nor to even file a Federal income tax return, based on existing tax laws, as well as the law as it is described in the United States Constitution as well as how it has been ruled upon by the United States Supreme Court. These individuals state that the obligation of payment of the Federal income tax is done so through voluntary compliance, as is specifically outlined in current tax law and not through mandatory compliance, as implied by the Internal Revenue Service. Further it has been revealed that the Federal income tax exists for the singular and sole purpose of paying the interest which is incurred when the Federal government, instead of printing the money themselves, borrows the money from a private banking cartel, commonly referred to as the Federal Reserve, thus adding significant justification of the efforts of indivuals seeking to avoid payment of federal income tax.

This unsourced material is already covered in part in this article and in the relevant articles on tax protesters. Yours, Famspear 16:22, 14 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

As explained over and over in the related articles, neither the U.S. Supreme Court nor any other Federal court has ever ruled that the average American worker is not legally obligated to pay a Federal income tax, etc. This material is blatantly false.

The statements beginning with "Many individuals, however, argue" and "Further it has been revealed" are also examples of "weasel wording"; they are unsourced. Yours, Famspear 16:25, 14 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

Why does the article read, "the mistaken belief..."? It's not a mistaken belief; no one has ever proved it to be false. There is no proof that can be referenced to state otherwise in this article. It should be edited to read, "the belief...". 69.152.173.243 01:20, 6 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

Dear user at IP69.152.173.243: The verbiage to which you are referring relates to the ratification of the Sixteenth Amendment. The "belief" has been "proven," as you put it, to be false on a multitude of occasions -- in fact, every single time the argument has been raised in court. See Tax protester constitutional arguments.
Legally speaking, however, ratification of a constitutional amendment is a legal issue anyway, not a "factual" issue. That means that ratification that is not really subject to being "proven" true or false. You generally cannot get a court to overturn a constitutional amendment that has been certified as having been ratified. Either an amendment was ratified, or it wasn't. Under the U.S. legal system, the certification of ratification is, generally speaking, legally conclusive. It's not generally subject to being overturned in a court of law.
For more background on how this works, see The Law that Never Was, an article about a tax protester who wrote a book trying to argue that the Sixteenth Amendment was never ratified. The protester even used his own book in his own criminal tax case -- to no avail.
However, we may want to delete the word "mistaken" anyway, for a more neutral presentation. Let me take a look at the verbiage again. Yours, Famspear 02:07, 6 September 2007 (UTC)Reply
OK, I've deleted the word "mistaken" in two places where it's used. The "beliefs" are "mistaken" from a legal standpoint, but the use of the word is a bit redundant, and maybe marginally POV, anyway. Yours, Famspear 02:15, 6 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

The distinction in the United States - to be deleted

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I have simplified the section "The distinction in the United States" without loss of information. It is now plain that the main thrust of the article and the definitions of evasion and avoidance above this section all show that there is no "distinction" of the position in the US - already the US position is reflected by the article. Accordingly, this section will be deleted imminently. Paul Beardsell 03:19, 3 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

History

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What about the "History of Tax evasion" itself? The article attempts to determine when the term was defined. However, as most people will commonly believe, there were countless tax evasions in the Medieval times, of peasants attempting to not pay taxes. Does it matter if teh crime is commited with fraugelent details or with a pitchfork, as in Peasant uprisings? What about Robin hood, wasn't he a tax evader? We could include that, even if his existence is questioned. Tourskin 23:54, 18 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

Tax protester definition

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I removed the tax protester definition because it is unsourced and conflicts with the definition in the "tax protester" article and Black's Law Dictionary. Mpublius 16:46, 3 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

What happen to our old definition, particularly the second sentence. I had a source for it and it is more commonly used in the media to portray any person that demostrates against taxation (be it they type of taxation to how much taxation - they're all labeled tax protesters as they're protesting a tax) - see Talk:Tax_protester#Definition. "A tax protester is an individual who denies the obligation to pay a tax (for which the government has determined that person is liable) based on a belief that the government is acting outside of its legal authority when imposing such taxes. Alternatively, the term has been used to describe a person who participates in a tax demonstration, even if the individual did not deny tax obligations." Morphh (talk) 17:25, 03 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

Agreed. The change was by Mpublius, and the change was not accurate as used in the context here. I will correct. Famspear 17:56, 3 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

OK, I see that Mpublius had simply deleted the sentence, which included a link to the article on tax protesters, where the evolution of the various meanings of the term "tax protester" is shown. I have now reverted to the version prior to the change by Mpublius. Mpublius has been trying intermittently and unsuccessfully to delete references to the term "tax protester" in various Wikipedia articles. For background on this, see the extensive discussions on the talk page for Tom Cryer, and the user talk page for Mpublius. Yours, Famspear 18:01, 3 October 2007 (UTC)Reply
Dear editors: Also, the reason given by Mpublius -- that the definition "conflicts" with the Black's Law Dictionary definition -- should be taken with a grain of salt. This all started out with Mpublius arguing, more or less, that the term "tax protester" was "libelous," and that it should not be used in Wikipedia. When an extensive list of citations was added -- by me -- to the article on tax protesters to show that the term "tax protester" and "tax protest" are indeed technical, formal legal terms found in dictionaries and court documents -- terms with more than one definition -- Mpublius tried to ignore the relevant meaning (i.e., a tax protester as someone who makes outlandish legally frivolous arguments about taxes).
Contrary to what Mpublius would like, the term tax "protest" is still used today in more than one legal sense -- with the common thread being that the taxpayer is somehow disputing the validity of a tax. However, there is a big difference between (A) my filing a formal written "protest" with the Internal Revenue Service after the IRS audits my client's tax return and decides that it wants more tax because a particular expense supposedly is not deductible, and (B) someone arguing that the Federal income tax itself does not apply to compensation for personal services of a private sector employee in the form of wages, etc., which would be a completely frivolous argument rejected in hundreds of court cases. As used in this article, and in the various Wikipedia articles on tax protesters, the term is used in the latter sense. The earlier definitions (such as the Black's Law Dictionary definition) were put in Wikipedia to show that regardless of whether Mpublius likes the use of the term, the formal use of the term in the U.S. legal system has expanded over the years. The citations were put there in response to Mpublius' arguments that Wikipedia shouldn't be using the term "tax protester." The latest edit here by Mpublius is just the latest part of a consistent pattern. Again, review the edit history for Mpublius for more details. Yours, Famspear 18:15, 3 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

Article decay

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This article, despite flaws, did, at a point in the past, at least have reasonable short definitions early on. These have now been corrupted by ungrammatical, sometime incorrect and unreferenced exposition. To be fixed! Paul Beardsell 04:09, 5 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

New Development?

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I have made it a matter of periodic amusement to listen to/read about tax avoidance and/or tax protestor schemes. A new tactic - new to me at any rate - that I have become aware of only today is the case of the Las Vegas contractor by the name of Robert Kahre. A quick Google search will tell the full story from multiple sources. In a nutshell, he paid his workers in gold and silver coins and reported only the face value of the coins. As this was only a fraction of the actual worth, the reported taxable income fell below the threshold where it was required to be taxed. The IRS, understandably, sued him and several of his workers. The IRS lost in court. My question is three fold:

1. Presuming that the workers exchanged them at a Coin-Collector’s shop and not at the bank – where they would only get the face value – is there a provision for a “capitol gains” like tax that they’ll have to pay anyway? Or is this as bullet-proof as the tax-protestor sites would have you believe?

2. I only have the regurgitated-for-the-public version of the court case. Did the IRS lose because Robert Kahre found a loophole or merely because the IRS screwed up in prosecuting the case?

3. Should a section be added to this article, or the tax-protestor article?

SunsHand 15:13, 18 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

Dear SunsHand: The short but tentative answer is that because the Kahre case was a criminal case, and assuming that the "not guilty" verdicts were made by a jury (as opposed to being found "not guilty" in a verdict by the judge, in what's called a "bench trial"), the issues about the proper amount of income to report on a tax return (face value of the coins, versus some other and presumably higher value) were probably not even decided, or might have even been decided against the defendants, depending on what kinds of motions the defendants did or did not file prior to jury deliberations, and depending on how the questions of "value" were treated (i.e., as being legal questions for the judge, versus factual questions for the jury). I'm aware of the Kahre case, but haven't yet studied it.
For a non-technical person, it's actually a bit counter-intuitive: How can a criminal defendant lose on an argument, and still be found not guilty? It happens all the time of course.
The defendants could very well be liable for huge amounts of tax. Again, in a criminal tax trial, a "not guilty" verdict does not necessarily constitute a determination of lack of civil liability (in a Federal tax case, civil liability means the liability to pay the tax, penalties, and interest). Same rule in other legal contexts: Remember that O.J. Simpson was found "not guilty" in a murder trial, but was later found liable to pay damages in a civil trial about the same precise event: the killing of his wife (ex-wife?) and Mr. Goldman.
My guess is that the IRS (or to be more correct, the Department of Justice or DOJ, as the IRS itself does not prosecute criminal tax cases) probably did not lose because of any "loophole." The DOJ might or might not have screwed up in prosecuting the case. Sometimes juries find defendants "guilty" and other times "not guilty." There are always examples where juries get it wrong (in either direction). On this case? I don't know.
As far as tax protester web sites go, I have studied them for years, and I would trust anything on a tax protester web site about as far as I can throw the Empire State Building. Even when protesters provide accurate quotes from Supreme Court cases (and you can never tell until you check), they argue that the quotes somehow "mean" something other than what they say, and more importantly the tax protesters routinely and habitually lie about what the Supreme Court and all other Federal courts have actually ruled -- over and over (often times blatantly saying that the Supreme Court ruled an income tax UNconstitutional where the Court really ruled the tax to be constitutional, such as in the leading Brushaber and similar cases). If there's a tax protester component to the Kahre case, then the Kahre material may go at Tax protester arguments or in one of the related Wikipedia articles specifically devoted to tax protester material (see the links in the Tax protester arguments article.)
Anyway, when I find time I'll check out more on the Kahre case. Yours, Famspear 17:27, 18 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

Famspear – your read on the situation was indeed correct and a bit more digging on my part yielded that it was indeed a criminal trial - i.e. with a jury - and the DOJ failed to produce evidence of a willfull disregard for the law – essential for these trials as you’ve pointed out on other talk pages. Here’s a pertinent quote:

The Internal Revenue Service had never before provided guidance on how to handle gold and silver coins that circulate, only on noncirculating collectible coins, according to Kennedy, who is a federal public defender. "If that's the case, we're not going to take someone's liberty from them, on something that a (certified public accountant) with a master's degree doesn't even know. That's a scary country, and I don't live in that country." http://www.lvrj.com/news/9893062.html

SO, as you astutely pointed out, no “ruling” was made to support any tax-protester arguments. The same article quoted above also did allude to a DOJ mess-up being a factor in a lack of conviction as some of the evidence was seized in a raid not covered by a warrant. The article, and others I have read, is still vague as to what the defendants’ – plural because the DOJ pursued both the employer and employees for conspiracy as well as other tax evasion charges – actual tax-liability is. The total ammount of taxes appears to be $141 million. So are the individuals inquestion still looking at a $141 million debt?

This brings me back to my first question about a “capitol gains” like tax. Assume for a moment that a traditional income tax only taxed the face-value of the coins – unlikely I know but let’s allow it for now. There would be a “realization event” if and when the coins were sold to a collector/smelted down for the value of their metal. So at THAT point they would have to pay taxes on the revenue. Correct?

Also, do not fear that I was even for a moment duped or persuaded by the tax-protestor sites. They are every bit the quagmire you make them out to be and I instinctively knew that something stank like three-day-old fish. I just was trying to pin down exactly what the nature of their flaw was.

From my read, it still may have a place in both Wikipedia articles. Kahre was paying in "gold standard" coins because he felt the Federal Reserve System was wrong - a belief common among tax protestors but not necessarily intrinsic to their beliefs. On the surface it appears he may merely have been trying to avoid using Federal Reserve Notes - what you and I call "money" - and the tax avoidance aspect was more of a not-unintentional windfall. Any confirmation of this viewpoint would be appreciated also. SunsHand 22:34, 18 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

Dear SunsHand: Yes, assuming that the Internal Revenue Service has assessed or will be assessing taxes, the individuals in question still looking at large amounts due (I don't know the amounts).
However, if the IRS has not yet assessed the tax and has not yet issued what's called a statutory notice of deficiency, the taxpayers may be able to wait for the issuance of such a notice and then contest the taxes in United States Tax Court -- without first having to paying the contested amount. The burden of proof will generally be on the taxpayer.
If they're further along in the process (i.e., if the taxes have already been formally assessed), the taxpayers can still pay the taxes (insert applicable choking, gasping sounds here) and then sue for refund of whatever amount the taxpayers contend is overpaid, in U.S. District Court. Again, the burden of proof will be on the taxpayer, generally.
On the other question, if you sell gold coins, etc., you would have to report as a gain the excess of the value of whatever you receive in the sale over your adjusted basis amount (generally, your cost) in the items sold. For example, if you purchased gold coins for $350,000 and later sold them for $500,000 in regular money, you would report a gain of $150,000.
Now, whether that $150,000 gain is a "capital gain" or "ordinary income" sort of depends on why you were holding the coins. If you were engaged in the business of being a dealer in the coins and were holding them for resale in the ordinary course of your business (the way your grocery store buys milk and then resells it to the public), the gain might be "ordinary income," taxed at ordinary tax rates. Not very beneficial. If you were not engaged in the business of buying and reselling coins, but were instead holding the coins as an investment (for example, you are a just a plumber or an electrician or an accountant by trade, but you buy a piece of land and hold on to it with the hope that it will later go up in value so you can sell the land at a gain), the gain could be capital gain. If there's a capital gain and the asset was held for over a year before the sale, you could get beneficial long-term capital gains treatment (a better deal than ordinary income).
On Mr, Kahre's belief about the Federal Reserve System, etc., I don't know, so I can neither confirm nor deny.
That's an oversimplied answer, and I'm not sure how all this fits in the article. Yours, Famspear 02:19, 19 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

Famspear - Thanks for the feedback. I'll see if I can get enough relevent sources to put a short sub-heading in this article. I'll include just the most basic elements and if enough interest is shown, we can expand the section. This is just too odd of a story to ignore. SunsHand 15:46, 19 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

Article assessment

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The above article assessment is unreasoned and therefore unreasonable. Paul Beardsell (talk) 00:51, 20 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

The template says:

"After rating the article, please provide a short summary on the article's comments page to explain your ratings and/or identify the strengths and weaknesses."

Now, the WP guidelines do not place the same emphasis on "short", so the template is in error here. But even if "short" were correct, the comment does not identify the strengths or weaknesses. It identifies one strenght and no weakness. No other comment. I rate this article assessment very poor and will be removing it if it is not quickly improved as per the guidelines. Paul Beardsell (talk) 01:01, 20 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

I will expand on the reasoning since you asked about weaknesses and the sort. Please give me three hours because I am leaving my computer and will not return for an hour or two. I am happy to comply with your request per Wikipedia:WikiProject Council/Assessment FAQ.EECavazos (talk) 01:16, 20 November 2007 (UTC)Reply
Paul, the summary is an optional item that is suggested to help the editors of the article improve it. It is not mandatory for assessment but can certainly be requested. If you have a problem with the assessment and would like it reassessed, you can look at the criteria for assessment and request the assessor reconsider base on your argument as to why it is above or below the assessed grade. If you want more detail in improving an article beyond what the assessor has commented, you can request a WikiProject taxation peer-review or Wikipedia peer-review. GA and FA ratings can not be given by the WikiProject. It looks like EECavazos recommended adding some additional references for a B-class. A peer review and a little more work and it may be ready to be submitted for GA. Morphh (talk) 1:42, 20 November 2007 (UTC)

I am not sure how to participate in discussion on an article. But I have some observations to make. First of too many issues have been addressed in this article and the order is not clear. One solution is to have two articles on tax avoidance and tax evasion. There has been huge research on the two issues since 1973. Second way of unwinding the issues is to separate the economics perspective from the legal one. Foremost, the order of sub-topics should be revised and due attention should be paid to different types of taxes. Also country examples or case laws should receive secondary importance. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Faizul Latif Chowdhury (talkcontribs) 20:12, 23 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

USA centric

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Parts of the article are true only in the USA. I have no problem with that - let's have the USA situation properly documented as well as that of every other country. But often the USA-only information is not flagged as such. Sometimes correct if necessarily general information is replaced by information which is more detailed but correct only in the USA but this info is not flagged as being USA-only. An example is the adoption of USA terminology re foundations while losing info on trusts. Paul Beardsell (talk) 23:02, 26 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Section "direct avoidance" removed

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I have removed the sub-section "Direct Avoidance" which read as follows:

Many taxes apply to some types of goods but not other, similar goods. For example, the income tax generally applies to work done for somebody else, but not work done for oneself. Therefore you can reduce your income tax by doing more work that replaces expenditures and less work that counts as "income" because it pays indirectly for the same expenditures. If marginal tax rates are high then the income tax saved in this case may exceed the amount lost due to economic inefficiency.

Why? Google search for "direct avoidance" tax shows this article to be the good source for use of the term. No other reference or citation is provided. It looks like WP:OR to me.

The example is a goood one of tax avoidance. Perhaps it could be re-instated in an "Examples" section?

But "direct avoidance"? What's that?

Paul Beardsell (talk) 22:25, 28 February 2009 (UTC)Reply

Article assessment - reprise

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The justification promised above, a long time ago, has not arisen. Assessment removed. Paul Beardsell (talk) 22:32, 28 February 2009 (UTC)Reply

Unsourced conjecture

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Regarding this verbiage:

In the United States, persons subject to the Internal Revenue Code who earn income by illegal means (gambling, theft, drug trafficking etc.) are required to report unlawful gains as income when filing annual tax returns (see e.g., James v. United States 366 U.S. 213 (1961), overruling Commissioner v. Wilcox, 327 U.S. 404 (1946).), but they often do not do so.

A fellow editor has twice added this material:

The reason for this is unclear: doing so would not serve as an admission of guilt due to the strict prohibitions on disclosure provided by IRC 6103 . . . . . it may be that those with illegally earned income are not aware of this protection, do not trust it, or simply wish to avoid paying tax on their illegal income.

This is conjecture by a Wikipedia editor, and it's original research. It's interesting, but I would argue that it does not really belong in the article in this unsourced form.

As an aside, the exceptions under section 6103 are numerous, and definitely are not limited to "tax fraud" investigations. If you save a copy of section 6103, a PDF version of the section may run to over forty pages, depending on the kind of file and the printer. It's one of the longest sections, perhaps the longest section, in the entire Internal Revenue Code.

The exceptions under section 6103 -- which allow government employees and even non-governmental employees access to copies of your own tax returns without your permission -- are not even limited to criminal matters, or to fraud matters. For example, if you as an individual file a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the Trustee appointed in the case has a more or less absolute right (I hesitate to use the term "absolute") to receive, FROM THE IRS, copies of all your individual income tax returns for ANY AND ALL years prior to the year you filed bankruptcy, and for the year you filed bankruptcy. There is absolutely no legal requirement that the Trustee show that he is engaged in any kind of fraud investigation (or in any investigation at all). It's a statutory right.

Just as importantly, when you disclose something on a tax return, you are failing to assert your Fifth Amendment privilege against being compelled to be a witness against yourself. The mere fact that section 6103 is on the books does not change that.

So, in response to the statement that people often do not disclose things on tax returns, it is not for us as Wikipedia editors to say that "the reason for this is unclear". Actually, perhaps we should also delete the verbiage stating "they often do not do so" -- as that sounds like unsourced conjecture as well (probably a true statement, but still unsourced conjecture). Thoughts, anyone? Famspear (talk) 18:29, 10 April 2009 (UTC)Reply

Oh, and in case I wasn't clear, the statement -- that "doing so would not serve as an admission of guilt due to the strict prohibitions on disclosure provided by IRC 6103" -- is incorrect as a matter of law. The prohibitions under section 6103 do not prevent your statements on your tax return from being "an admission of guilt." Those statements on your tax return certainly can be used against you in a criminal case. The protections of section 6103 and the Fifth Amendment privilege are two separate legal concepts. If you fail to assert the Fifth Amendment privilege on a federal income tax return, you simply have no such privilege with respect to what you disclosed on the return. Famspear (talk) 18:34, 10 April 2009 (UTC)Reply

OK, I see that my fellow editor has now solved the problem by deleting the prior conjecture as well. Famspear (talk) 18:37, 10 April 2009 (UTC)Reply

The Macro Economics and the lesser of two evils

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The top tiers of drug lords sitting in Latin and South America surely want to recycle their ill-gotten gains. They enjoy their lives and have no apparent means of income. But everyone else and all the newsagencies of the world broadcast what their estimated wealth to be- no doubt with a bit of help from the CIA and FBI. The US governments are particularly worried because the drug lords' wealth is derived from the US market and the money that leaks from the US is in hard US $s. Since the US can take out Saddam Hussein, it is not inconceivable for the US to take out the drug lords. They could easily use their tough anti-money laundering and anti-tax evasion legislations as the reason. But the moment they did that the drug lords would rather bury or burn these hard US $s, as ancient people had done with their gold. That way, the US will not get a use of this illegal money nor will the money return to the USA, and most probably the demand for drugs in the USA will not fall. Thus there seem to be a compromise. The US government goes after poor people who cannot afford expensive lawyers and then claim to its people that they are catching loads of people engaging in tax frauds whilst the real criminals are left to enjoy their ill-gotten gains. If the real criminals, for example the drug lords and pimps were put out of business, would the demand for luxury goods (expensive jewelry, cars, Rolexes, perfumes etc) drop dramatically?

Has anyone made a study of the economic impact it might have if the US really went after the big criminal bosses? 86.140.37.171 (talk) 00:51, 30 October 2009 (UTC)Reply

Merge of Tax evasion investigations

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Tax Maximization?

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I want to increase the amount of taxes I pay, for two reasons: 1)to donate to the IRS, and 2)to avoid getting audited. I claim negative deductions, put a higher income on my 1099, and ask the IRS to put me in a higher bracket.

All of these actions increase my taxes.--RussianReversal (talk) 21:20, 15 May 2010 (UTC)Reply

Warren Buffett wants to pay more tax. See Stop Coddling the Super-Rich by Warren Buffett, New York Times, August 14, 2011. Perhaps we need another article called tax compliance or something. Nirvana2013 (talk) 08:54, 3 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

Evasion rates

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It would be useful if the article gave more sourced information on the evasion rates which apply to different types of tax in different jurisdictions. For instance I have heard that the evasion rate for property taxes is about 2% whereas that for income tax is 8% or more and that for sales tax can be as high as 20%. This is notable information since it means that for every $1.00 of government spending, you would need to raise $1.02 from honest taxpayers if you were using property taxes to collect the revenue, at least $1.09 using income tax, and $1.25 using sales taxes. The extra tax is required to cover the revenue which should have been collected from the tax evaders. Does anyone know where this sort of information might be sourced ? -- Derek Ross | Talk 17:43, 13 April 2011 (UTC)Reply

Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA)

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This relatively new topic is mentioned under the HIRE Act, but does not yet have its own page. I propose to add one. Does anyone have comments? Seniorexpat (talk) 07:45, 24 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Split avoidance and evasion?

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This article flip flops back and forth between talking about the two. The individual sections are fairly good, but the flip flopping makes it very confusing. These are two different things, it seems like there should be two articles. The distinctions made at the very top of the similarities and differences between the two are good, but the intermixing is not. 76.166.204.89 (talk) 01:56, 30 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

Support - Probably about time. There is enough information to warrant two articles i.e. tax evasion and tax avoidance. Also the article gets confusing mixing the two subjects. Nirvana2013 (talk) 10:47, 11 October 2011 (UTC)Reply
Comment - Not sure whether this is a good idea or not. The two concepts are normally discussed together so I can see the rationale for having a single article but admittedly there probably is enough material here to make two articles. Perhaps we just need to reorganise the article to avoid the flip-flopping. -- Derek Ross | Talk 20:52, 11 October 2011 (UTC)Reply
Support This was suggested years ago, and hasn't been done, I think, because of the other matter that would not naturally fall into either article. I suggest that the avoidance and evasion articles are split out with short sections left - using the usual {{Main}} templates, and copious see-also cross refs between the resulting three articles. Tax evasion investigations could at the same time be merged into the new Tax evasion article, if appropriate. Rich Farmbrough, 12:43, 21 October 2011 (UTC).Reply
  Done Nirvana2013 (talk) 23:06, 21 October 2011 (UTC)Reply

UK comment

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I've moved this comment from the article to the talk page This article has been written by someone who does not know much about the history of the tax evasion/avoidance in the United Kingdom, these terms have been in use for many many years and are not "recent". I put a comment on previously to the same effect but it has been obviously removed, sorry this does give confidence in the accuracy of Wikipedia entries. This is not vandalism as previously indicated but trying to help this Wikipedia entry to become more accurate.— Preceding unsigned comment added by 212.62.8.1 (talk) 09:16, January 9, 2013‎

Thanks for the comment. I don't think there's anything in the article to reference the "recent" comment, but do you know of any reliable source that shows tax evasion/tax avoidance being used in the UK some time ago? Ravensfire (talk) 15:23, 9 January 2013 (UTC)Reply
17th century? Nirvana2013 (talk) 08:36, 13 February 2013 (UTC)Reply

Assessment comment

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The comment(s) below were originally left at Talk:Tax noncompliance/Comments, and are posted here for posterity. Following several discussions in past years, these subpages are now deprecated. The comments may be irrelevant or outdated; if so, please feel free to remove this section.

Comment(s)Press [show] to view →
== WP Tax Class ==

This article should be at least a B class. It has a good amount of references throughout most of the article but other areas are lacking.EECavazos (talk) 20:55, 18 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

===Expansion per request=== Review by EECavazos (talk) 02:24, 20 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

The WikiProject on Taxation has a set of criteria for assessing the class of an article in Wikipedia:WikiProject Taxation/Assessment. The criteria for a B class is the most applicable to this article for the following reasons: =====Weaknesses=====

  • References. Content in Wikipedia needs an appropriate number of references particularly in legal related areas otherwise incorrect information and original research/self-published work may prevail throughout the article. The follow sections lack an appropriate number of in-text citations: Tax Avoidance, Tax Evasion, Distinction in various jurisdictions, and Public opinion on tax avoidance, and Responses to tax avoidance. This as the reader experience in the B class, to wit, "Useful to many, but not all, readers. A casual reader flipping through articles would feel that they generally understood the topic, but a serious student or researcher trying to use the material would have trouble doing so, or would risk error in derivative work." A serious student/researcher and the general reader would need well referenced/in-text citation content. Further the criteria for the B class article says that the article meets the criteria for the start class article and comes close to the criteria for the Good Article class except that in a B class article it has "significant gaps or missing elements or references."EECavazos (talk) 02:45, 20 November 2007 (UTC)Reply
  • Wikiquote box. The quote section needs to be reformatted so that the wikiquote box is between two section lines rather than crossing over the first line.02:45, 20 November 2007 (UTC)
  • Globalized. The article covers the US and the UK. Tax avoidance and evasion exists elsewhere. While the English language is the language of the US and the UK, it is not limited to other countries such as Canada, Australia, and Ireland. An article above a B class in the Good Article class would be more globalized than this article. It should at least cover Canada, Australia, and Ireland if not Europe in general and elsewhere.EECavazos (talk) 02:45, 20 November 2007 (UTC)Reply
  • Uneven detail. Many sections are just section stubs like tax evasion in VATs.

=====Strengths=====

  • Scope. This article covers the topic in depth. It addresses both of the topics, discusses control of one of them, and then discusses distinctions between the US and the UK. The article also addresses public opinion and and responses to the article's topics. This fulfills the criteria for a B class article where "usually a majority of the material needed for a completed article" exist. A short section on history section would be other material needed for a completed article.EECavazos (talk) 02:53, 20 November 2007 (UTC)Reply
  • Impact. See Scope re public opinion, control, and responses. These sections gives the reader a general idea of the notability of the topis and what impact they have on the areas to which the article addresses.EECavazos (talk) 02:53, 20 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

=====Conclusion===== As the article presently stands, its weaknesses and strengths justify a B class. Someone else needs to agree to my asssessment in order to promote the article's class. Once all the weaknesses listed in this review were addressed and fixed, then this article should be a Good Article or higher.EECavazos (talk) 03:43, 20 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

Wow, sorry this was left for so long. As the article stands now I have left it at C class for two main reasons. The biggest is it is still primarily focused on the US and needs a worldwide perspective. That means it fails the scope and coverage needed of a B class article. Of course this is what makes all taxation articles very hard since few people if any have a worldwide perspective. The other reason is that the tax avoidance section is far too limited to be comprehensive or even tough on all aspects of the topic. Very simple tax avoidance efforts such as tax planning, etc are not covered. I put it at High priority, though it could justify top priority I think. - Taxman Talk 16:56, 29 May 2009 (UTC)Reply

Substituted at 22:00, 26 June 2016 (UTC)

Integration proposal

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It is proposed to integrate the page Tax non compliance, paragraph "Difference between tax avoidance and tax evasion" giving a more complete definition of the phenomenon. Here the link of the page of our university project: https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discussioni_progetto:Coordinamento/Università/UNITO/Diritto_Tributario#Descrizione_dell'intervento_proposto

Thank you. Greetings, CapitanoPicard (talk) 11:52, 30 November 2021 (UTC)CapitanoPicardReply