Demystifying the Inflation Reduction Act: Part 4 — Additional Provisions

By |2025-07-10T10:36:20-07:00September 21, 2022|Categories: Legislation, Tax Credits|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA ’22) is 750-plus pages of tax and spending legislation designed to tackle everything from climate change to the runaway costs of prescription medication. It contains tax credits for clean energy, nuclear power production, electric vehicles, and other technologies intended to fuel the transition to a lower carbon economy.

It also seeks to reduce health insurance premiums for 13 million low- and middle-income Americans and imposes a $2,000 per year cap on out-of-pocket medicine costs under Medicare Part D. And it establishes a new 15 percent minimum tax on the “book income” of large corporations.

Oh, and if you believe the stated intent, it provides about $80 billion in new funding to the IRS over the next 10 years that is not exclusively for increased tax enforcement. More on this below.

IRS Audit Cartoon

We covered many of the provisions of the new legislation, which the President signed into law on Aug. 16, 2022, in the first three parts of this four-part series:

Today’s Part 4 of this series covers additional provisions in the IRA ’22 that apply to increased IRS funding, drug pricing, and Affordable Care Act insurance premiums.

Increased IRS Funding

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has been underfunded for years. You may have experienced the ramifications of this underfunding if you ever tried to contact the IRS with a question or concern. But the lack of funding has also impaired the IRS’s ability to conduct audits and collect unpaid taxes.

The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 provides an additional $80 billion to the IRS over 10 years to improve customer services and expand its enforcement and compliance efforts. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that these investments will raise an additional $124 billion from increased collections over a 10-year period.

Perhaps the most controversial aspect of this increased funding is what the IRS plans to do with it — hire and train up to 87,000 new IRS agents. While U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen has indicated that the additional funds will not be used to increase audits of people earning less than $400,000, it would be foolish to believe that such an increase in enforcement efforts would not be used to target regular, everyday taxpayers.

Warning: As soon as the IRS uses the increased funding to become fully staffed, we are confident that it will expand its enforcement efforts to small businesses and households making less than $400,000 per year.

Your best defense is Continue reading… Continue reading… Continue reading…

Audit-Proofing Your Tax Return – Part 2 of Small Business Guide to Legally Reducing Your Tax Burden

Welcome to Part 2 of our 12-part series on how to legally reduce your income tax burden. Here in Part 2, we going to allay fears you may have of being audited by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

While failing to plan ahead for taxes (the subject of Part 1 of this series) is probably the No. 1 mistake small business owners make, letting the threat of an IRS audit discourage you from claiming certain deductions or credits is a close second. Here at Stees Walker & Company, we encourage clients to claim every legally allowable deduction and credit. Failure to do so leaves money on the table — our clients’ money — and that’s something we just can’t tolerate. The fact is, your chances of being audited are slim.

However, we encourage you to assume you will be audited. What?

On its surface, that advice may strike you as a contradiction, but it’s really not. Assuming you will be audited simply calls for documenting all income and expenses, so in the event your business is audited, you have the documentation needed to prove your case. In other words, respect the IRS, but don’t fear it. Today’s historically low audit rates make it pay to be aggressive in claiming deductions and credits, but they is no excuse for careless accounting and record-keeping.

Afraid to Raise Red Flags?

As a taxpayer, chances are good that, at some time, you chose not to claim a deduction or did not claim the maximum you’re allowed because you were afraid “it would raise a red flag.” The fact is, audit rates are so low, most legitimate deductions simply aren’t likely to raise any red flags. Audit rates hit an all-time high in 1972 at one for every 44 returns the IRS received. But lately they’ve dropped to historic lows. According to the IRS, for 2019, the overall audit rate was just one in every 220 returns, or 0.45 percent of all returns.

Roughly half of those hinged on one issue — the Earned Income Tax Credit for low-income working families. The rest of the audits focused mainly on returns filed by small businesses — especially sole proprietorships and businesses that have plenty of opportunities to hide income. Examples? Single location restaurants and laundromats. (The IRS publishes a whole series of Continue reading… Continue reading… Continue reading…

Go to Top