|
|
|
|
|
by losvedir
2757 days ago
|
|
> There is an income tax but there is no income tax return. The "tax return" is the form you fill out that computes your taxes. The "tax refund" is the money you get back if you had overpayed. Do you really mean there's no tax return? If so, how is that calculated and how is the money taken? In the US something like 80% of tax returns could be calculated by the government on behalf of the tax payer, but for whatever reason that hasn't been implemented. Is it something like that? |
|
The reason is that the USG doesn't have a prior knowledge of material facts that may change your return, most notably deductions and charitable donations (especially small monetary donations, in-kind contributions, used goods such as clothing, etc). You're probably right that a vast majority of returns could be accurately calculated on January 1 because they don't have a 10K, Schedules A or C, but they don't know which returns fall into that category.
Simplification of the tax code could go a long way toward increasing that percentage but I'm not sure it could ever be enough to have the government simply tabulate a bill or refund for every citizen.