Tax evasion at the top of the U.S. income distribution and how to fight it (2024)

March 22, 2021

AUTHORS:

Daniel ReckMax RischGabriel Zucman

Topics

Individual Taxation

How much taxes do high-income Americans evade? And what kinds of evasion tactics do they use? These questions are important for tax enforcement policies and the measurement of income inequality in the United States. Answering them can improve tax enforcement policy and the fairness of federal fiscal policies more broadly, a key priority as policymakers attempt to build a more equitable economy in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.

In a new study conducted in collaboration with researchers at the U.S. Internal Revenue Service, we show that American taxpayers with incomes in the top 1 percent are much more sophisticated than the other 99 percent at tax evasion. As a result, conventional estimates significantly underestimate the income and taxes evaded by the rich.1

Our findings point to several key steps that policymakers could take to combat widespread tax evasion by the very top income earners in the United States. First and foremost is the need for greater fiscal support for the IRS. Second, the IRS and Congress can target the ways in which the rich hide their incomes and obscure their actual tax obligations via so-called pass-through businesses and hidden offshore accounts.

Random audits and the tax gap

The IRS estimates that about 16 percent of all federal taxes go unpaid. A 16 percent tax gap means that $1 out of every $6 of taxes that should legally be paid is not paid. The IRS estimates that about 60 percent of the tax gap comes from underreporting of income on individuals’ tax returns. Conventionally, researchers at the agency and academics estimate this part of the tax gap with data from random audits. Most IRS audits are, of course, not random. The IRS generally prioritizes tax returns that it expects, based on a variety of factors, to be noncompliant. But to estimate the size of tax evasion and study its nature, the IRS also audits a number of returns randomly.

Our research shows that random audits may paint an accurate picture of the tax gap for 99 percent of taxpayers, but not for the top 1 percent. According to random audit data, all groups of the population underreport about 4 percent to 5 percent of their income on average. The only exception is the very top of the income distribution. Within the top 0.1 percent—taxpayers with income of more than $1.7 million—detected tax evasion falls to extremely low levels.

Interpreted naively, these data suggest that high-income people evade little when paying taxes. But substantial evidence from other sources of data, and many headlines that readers might recall, suggest that high-income tax evasion is far from minimal. Our new research provides concrete evidence that at least two types of tax evasion are quantitatively significant at the top of the U.S. income distribution and typically not detected through random audits.

What random audits miss

One type of tax evasion missed by random audits involves concealed offshore wealth.

Starting in 2008 and culminating in the Foreign Accounts Tax Compliance Act of 2010, the IRS conducted an ambitious initiative to crack down on offshore tax evasion. As documented in a prior study, this initiative led tens of thousands of U.S. taxpayers to disclose previously hidden offshore assets, such as bank accounts in Switzerland, either in the context of the IRS “Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program” or by wealthy U.S. individuals filing Foreign Bank Account Reports for the first time around the time of the crackdown in 2009–2011.

Among these taxpayers, hundreds had been randomly audited in the years immediately preceding their disclosure of unreported offshore assets. These individuals’ offshore tax evasion had not been detected in random audits, however, because even excellent auditors have difficulty detecting hidden offshore wealth. Moreover,offshore tax evasion is extremely concentrated at the top of the U.S. income distribution. Less than 1 in 1,000 individuals in the bottom 99 percent of the income distribution appear on our lists of taxpayers disclosing an offshore account following the crackdown. In contrast,about 1 in 15 people in the top 0.01 percent appear on these lists—lists that, according to the prior study, probably only capture 10 percent to 15 percent of all offshore evasion. (See Figure 1.)

Figure 1

Another source of tax evasion missed by random audits involves so-called pass-through business income.

Pass-through businesses (partnerships and S-corporations under the U.S. tax code) do not remit their own income taxes but rather this income “passes through” to their owners for tax purposes. Pass-through business income is highly concentrated at the top of the income distribution. Partnerships in particular can be highly complex because the owners of partnerships can be other pass-through businesses. And when an auditor encounters pass-through income during an individual random audit, we observe that they only proceed to audit the pass-through businesses themselves in less than 5 percent of cases. Consequently, random audits uncover very little pass-through business tax evasion, even though the complexity of these businesses can facilitate substantial evasion.

Our research shows that correcting, conservatively, for these two forms of undetected sophisticated tax evasion significantly changes the picture of tax evasion at the top of the income distribution painted by random audit data. Accounting for sophisticated tax evasion approximately doubles the tax gap for the top 0.1 percent of the U.S. income distribution, compared to conventional estimates. Additionally, accounting for underreported income increases estimates of the share of all income received by the top 1 percent by about 1.5 percentage points, which highlights the value of our findings for the measurement of inequality with data from tax returns.

Why is sophisticated tax evasion so concentrated at the top? In our working paper, we propose a new theoretical explanation based on three ideas. First, the concealment of tax evasion from auditors is costly, requiring substantial financial sophistication. Second, high-income people can save huge amounts of tax with little risk by adopting sophisticated strategies, which makes it worth the cost. Third, audit rates are relatively high at the very top of the income distribution, so if the audits are not thorough enough to correct sophisticated evasion, then frequent audits themselves incentivize the concealment of tax evasion.

Policy implications

Our results are important for the effective enforcement of tax evasion among very high-income Americans. First, existing statistics on total tax evasion at the very top of the U.S. income distribution are substantially underestimated. Second, the sophistication of top-end tax evasion suggests that increasing audit rates of high-income individuals alone may limit our progress.

Effective tax enforcement at the very top of the U.S. income distribution requires a more comprehensive approach. Strategies that would improve enforcement of tax evasion include:

The IRS already invests in many of these enforcement strategies, but budget cuts have severely curtailed the agency’s ability to conduct them efficiently and effectively.

We conservatively estimate that increased enforcement to close the income tax gap for the top 1 percent could yield $175 billion in currently uncollected income tax revenue per year. To put that in perspective, this would be enough revenue to make permanent the $3,000 to $3,600 annual child allowance in the American Rescue Plan and then make it about 50 percent more generous. Even modest success at enforcing taxes on the richest Americans could dramatically improve the fairness and progressivity of our tax system.

—Daniel Reck is an economist at the London School of Economics. Max Risch is an economist at the Carnegie Mellon University Tepper School of Business. Gabriel Zucman is an economist at the University of California, Berkeley.

March 22, 2021

AUTHORS:

Daniel ReckMax RischGabriel Zucman

Topics

Individual Taxation

End Notes

1. The paper is a collaboration between ourselves and two IRS co-authors, John Guyton and Patrick Langetieg. The views in the working paper and this article are our views and not the official position of the IRS.

Related

working paper

Tax Evasion at the Top of the Income Distribution: Theory and Evidence

March 22, 2021

John Guyton,Patrick Langetieg,Daniel Reck,Max Risch,Gabriel Zucman,

TOPICS: 2

Individual Taxation,

TOPICS: Individual Taxation,

In Conversation

In Conversation with Gabriel Zucman

ByHeather Boushey,

August 7, 2019

August 7, 2019

Heather Boushey,

TOPICS: 3

Economic Inequality, GDP 2.0,

TOPICS: Economic Inequality, GDP 2.0,

Vision 2020

A modest tax reform proposal to roll back federal tax policy to 1997

ByOwen Zidar,Eric Zwick,

February 18, 2020

February 18, 2020

Owen Zidar,Eric Zwick,

TOPICS: 7

Business Taxation, Economic Inequality, Economic Mobility, Fiscal Policy, Individual Taxation,

TOPICS: Business Taxation, Economic Inequality, Economic Mobility, Fiscal Policy, , Individual Taxation,

post

Eight graphs that tell the story of U.S. economic inequality

ByAustin Clemens,

December 9, 2019

December 9, 2019

Austin Clemens,

TOPICS: 1

Economic Inequality

TOPICS: Economic Inequality

working paper

Simplified distributional national accounts

ByThomas Piketty,Emmanuel Saez,Gabriel Zucman,

January 28, 2019

January 28, 2019

Thomas Piketty,Emmanuel Saez,Gabriel Zucman,

TOPICS: 1

GDP 2.0

TOPICS: GDP 2.0

post

The distribution of wealth in the United States and implications for a net worth tax

ByGreg Leiserson,Will McGrew,Raksha Kopparam,

March 21, 2019

March 21, 2019

Greg Leiserson,Will McGrew,Raksha Kopparam,

TOPICS: 3

Economic Inequality, Individual Taxation,

TOPICS: Economic Inequality, Individual Taxation,

Connect with us!

Explore the Equitable Growth network of experts around the country and get answers to today's most pressing questions!

Get in Touch

Tax evasion at the top of the U.S. income distribution and how to fight it (2024)
Top Articles
Find information about your device
Feedback - Numbers for iCloud
55Th And Kedzie Elite Staffing
855-392-7812
DENVER Überwachungskamera IOC-221, IP, WLAN, außen | 580950
Craigslist Kennewick Pasco Richland
Directions To 401 East Chestnut Street Louisville Kentucky
Red Wing Care Guide | Fat Buddha Store
Riegler & Partner Holding GmbH auf LinkedIn: Wie schätzen Sie die Entwicklung der Wohnraumschaffung und Bauwirtschaft…
Bubbles Hair Salon Woodbridge Va
Obituary | Shawn Alexander | Russell Funeral Home, Inc.
Luna Lola: The Moon Wolf book by Park Kara
10-Day Weather Forecast for Santa Cruz, CA - The Weather Channel | weather.com
Faurot Field Virtual Seating Chart
Accident On The 210 Freeway Today
Icivics The Electoral Process Answer Key
Tu Pulga Online Utah
Valic Eremit
Panola County Busted Newspaper
Stihl Dealer Albuquerque
The Boogeyman (Film, 2023) - MovieMeter.nl
January 8 Jesus Calling
Kimoriiii Fansly
Access a Shared Resource | Computing for Arts + Sciences
Vht Shortener
Bend Missed Connections
Happy Shuttle Cancun Review
Ilabs Ucsf
123Moviestvme
Matlab Kruskal Wallis
Yoshidakins
Garrison Blacksmith's Bench
Old Peterbilt For Sale Craigslist
Craigslist Hamilton Al
Sinfuldeeds Vietnamese Rmt
Junee Warehouse | Imamother
Ewwwww Gif
Dollar Tree's 1,000 store closure tells the perils of poor acquisitions
Ticket To Paradise Showtimes Near Regal Citrus Park
Complete List of Orange County Cities + Map (2024) — Orange County Insiders | Tips for locals & visitors
Birmingham City Schools Clever Login
Subdomain Finder
Lucyave Boutique Reviews
Vérificateur De Billet Loto-Québec
The Horn Of Plenty Figgerits
9:00 A.m. Cdt
Matt Brickman Wikipedia
Keci News
Dying Light Mother's Day Roof
Is Chanel West Coast Pregnant Due Date
4Chan Zelda Totk
Bradshaw And Range Obituaries
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Pres. Lawanda Wiegand

Last Updated:

Views: 5768

Rating: 4 / 5 (71 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Pres. Lawanda Wiegand

Birthday: 1993-01-10

Address: Suite 391 6963 Ullrich Shore, Bellefort, WI 01350-7893

Phone: +6806610432415

Job: Dynamic Manufacturing Assistant

Hobby: amateur radio, Taekwondo, Wood carving, Parkour, Skateboarding, Running, Rafting

Introduction: My name is Pres. Lawanda Wiegand, I am a inquisitive, helpful, glamorous, cheerful, open, clever, innocent person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.