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Book cover of The Great American Tax Dodge: How Spiraling Fraud and Avoidance Are Killing Fairness, Destroying the Income Tax, and Costing You
Federal (U.S.) Taxes, Income Taxes

The Great American Tax Dodge: How Spiraling Fraud and Avoidance Are Killing Fairness, Destroying the Income Tax, and Costing You

by Donald L. Barlett, James B. Steele
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Overview


In The Great American Tax Dodge, a book that should infuriate and galvanize citizens everywhere, the best-selling authors of America: What Went Wrong? expose the millions of Americans who are dodging their income taxes at every honest taxpayer's expense. With the clarity, insight, and readability that earned them two Pulitzer Prizes, Donald Barlett and James Steele explain how Americans are cheating as never before, and why most are getting away with it.
The authors relate the stories of a Manhattan couple who spent $1 million a month to maintain their lifestyle yet never paid income tax, a California couple who provided sport utility vehicles for their children at taxpayers' expense, an entrepreneur in Costa Rica who shows Americans how to hide their money in clandestine accounts offshore, and computer technicians at America's largest corporations who live tax-free.
Barlett and Steele describe how the Internet has democratized tax cheating, as proliferating Web sites and their often mysterious operators offer every service imaginable to escape taxes. They discuss the double standard the IRS employs in tax audits—one for the rich and well-connected and another for everyone else—and how the Justice Department tries to jail powerless citizens accused of tax law violations while allowing the wealthy and influential to go free. This book also documents how Congress is deliberately undermining the income tax in order to replace it with a system that will provide the largest windfall ever for the richest Americans—and increase the burden on everyone else. And it spells out how executives like Kenneth L. Lay bankrolled campaigns to institute such a tax system, based on accounting principles eerily similar to those employed at Lay's Enron Corporation. Finally, the authors consider our chances for reestablishing what was once the fairest tax system in the world.

Synopsis

"Barlett and Steele...are masters at mining obscure documents to see the big picture where most investigators never even knew there was a frame...Year after year, Congress continues to make tax laws more complex and more unfair, then refuses to give the IRS adequate resources to ferret out fraud. If the tax code isn't reformed soon, the authors warn, the consequences might be dire."—Baltimore Sun

"A hard-hitting expose of perceived gross inequities in the U.S. tax system."—Publishers Weekly

Baltimore Sun

Barlett and Steele . . . are masters at mining obscure documents to see the big picture where most investigators never even knew there was a frame . . . . Year after year, Congress continues to make tax laws more complex and more unfair, then refuses to give the IRS adequate resources to ferret out fraud. If the tax code isn't reformed soon, the authors warn, the consequences might be dire.

About the Author, Donald L. Barlett

Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele, for three decades investigative journalists at the Philadelphia
Inquirer,
are editors-at-large for Time,
Inc.
They have written six books, including the bestselling America: What Went Wrong?
In addition to their two Pulitzer Prizes, they have won two National Magazine Awards and more than three dozen other national newspaper and magazine awards.

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Editorials

Baltimore Sun

Barlett and Steele . . . are masters at mining obscure documents to see the big picture where most investigators never even knew there was a frame . . . . Year after year, Congress continues to make tax laws more complex and more unfair, then refuses to give the IRS adequate resources to ferret out fraud. If the tax code isn't reformed soon, the authors warn, the consequences might be dire.

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

A hard-hitting expos of perceived gross inequities in the U.S. tax system and of the current epidemic of tax fraud, this often shocking report could prove to be a bestseller, as was the authors' America: What Went Wrong?, published in 1992. Every year, more than 10 million Americans (by the government's own conservative estimate) fail to file federal tax returns and, consequently, honest taxpayers shell out $300 billion to cover what the delinquents owed. The culprit, in the view of Time Inc. writers-at-large Barlett and Steele (two-time Pulitzer winners), is not the IRS per se, though they blast its selective prosecution tactics, archaic computer system and absence of internal oversight. Rather, the fault, they insist, lies with a series of Republican and Democratic presidents and Congresses who, they say, have rewritten the tax laws to favor the privileged; Barlett and Steele present abundant evidence that the IRS stalks small-time tax cases while ignoring or going light on upper-income dodgers. Equally disturbing is their account of how the Internet is rapidly becoming the lead instrument promoting tax avoidance, as countless people--not just the rich--set up secret offshore bank accounts, trusts or dummy corporations to hide their assets with the click of a mouse. Barlett and Steele deride current flat-tax proposals as ploys to give a big tax cut to the wealthy at the expense of the less well off. They likewise reject a proposed national sales tax as equally onerous. Their solution: a massive rewrite and simplification of the existing progressive tax structure, elimination of special-interest provisions, and vigorous enforcement. This important, incendiary book may spark a national debate. 5-city author tour. Agent, Andrew Wylie. (Sept.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

The title tells all in this expose by two Pulitzer Prize-winning writers from Time Magazine. The IRS has admitted that tax fraud by individuals may cost the treasury up to $195 billion a year, but the authors point out that the stated amount is based on 1980s data and estimate that the level of current fraud is closer to $300 billion. They repeatedly state that lower- and middle-income taxpayers make up for the loss by paying more than their fair share. They do not address corporate fraud here. The authors blame Congress, and both parties equally, for creating and overcomplicated tax code, passing a special tax breaks, and attempting to emasculate the IRS b not funding enough compliance staff. The IRS comes in for some accurate criticisms, too especially for auditing low- and middle-income earners more frequently than the wealthy. The authors are very much in favor of the progressive tax rate and decry what they see as a a movement to reduce if not eliminate it in favor of a tax system that will benefit the rich. Over 400 footnotes document their case. A responsible and well-argued effort on a topic of great civic importance; highly recommended for high school, public and academic libraries. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 4/15/00.]-Patrick J. Brunet, Western Wisconsin Technical Coll., LaCross

Kirkus Reviews

An altogether rare bird: a book meant for a popular audience that actually speaks kindly of the IRS.

Book Details

Published
October 1, 2002
Publisher
University of California Press
Pages
314
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780520236103

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