Tax Collections Are Up 23% As Inflation, Wages, And Profits Rise
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Tax collections this year in the U.S. are up 23% compared to last year, according to a new study by the Tax Foundation citing Congressional Budget Office data. Inflation seems to be everywhere.

The Tax Foundation’s report on surging IRS collections might make you scratch your head and wonder what could happen with even more resources devoted to IRS collections. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is up 8.3% over last year overall, and some numbers are a lot worse. Just take food for example (up 11.4%) and energy (up 23.8%). However, it appears that wages in the U.S. have grown, too.

As to taxes, federal tax collections do not figure as part of the CPI, but it appears that federal tax collections are inflated, too – up 23% over the last year according to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). In fact, at the current pace, federal tax collections will reach a record high of about $5 trillion in nominal dollars for the fiscal year (FY) 2022 ending September 30, which is about $1 trillion more than last year’s $4 trillion in collections (also a record).

Inflation means higher prices and wages. Higher prices and wages mean higher business profits and salaries. More profits and salary mean higher business and individual tax receipts.

In fact, federal tax collections are approaching the all-time high of 20.5% of GDP set in 1943 during World War II. Compared to average federal tax collections in the post-war era of 17.2% of GDP, this year’s collections are set to exceed that level by 3 percentage points.

Unfortunately, the suggestion that tax collections might put us in better fiscal shape than we thought is not likely to quell concerns about taxpayers who are audited or taxpayers who fear that more IRS funding means more audits.

The optimistically named Inflation Reduction Act pumps up to $80 billion into the IRS. The funds are for increased enforcement, operational improvements, customer service, and systems modernization. That money is more than six times the current annual IRS budget of $12.6 billion. A whopping $45.6 billion is for enforcement so that the IRS can get better and faster at collecting taxes.

According to some reports, the IRS could hire up to 87,000 new agents, and with more than $45 billion being shoveled into enforcement, many people assume that there will be more audits and that Congress’s fiscal foot on the IRS gas pedal should be more taxpayers forking over money, and a richer horde of tax money to fuel the federal government. Tax collections are made up not only of money collected in IRS audits and deficiency assessments, and not only from IRS-enforced collection activities like levies.

Indeed, the bulk of the monies come in an old-fashioned way, by taxpayers listing their income on their tax returns and sending it to the IRS. We have a largely voluntary tax system that counts on taxpayer voluntary compliance. Yet today, there remains palpable fear on the main street that new IRS funding will mean more audits or more aggressive audits of at least some taxpayers. Some happy news about bigger tax collections may not change that.