The IRS is getting $80 billion dollars over the next 10 years from Congress — Here's why that's a big deal
The Internal Revenue Service brings in approximately 96% of the federal government's funding every year. In fiscal year 2021 alone, the IRS collected $4.1 trillion dollars in gross taxes. But funding for the agency declined by more than 20% between 2010 through 2019 when adjusted for inflation. This budget squeeze corresponded with a decline in tax audit rates across all income brackets, with the highest earners seeing the largest percent change. In August 2022, President Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act into law, which set aside nearly $80 billion for the IRS to be used over the next 10 years. Watch the video above to learn more about how the IRS works and how budget cuts have affected the agency.
UP NEXT
UP NEXT
-
Morgan Stanley raises Apple price target to $190
CNBC
-
Novartis CEO Vas Narasimhan on the latest research on a breast cancer drug
CNBC
-
MongoDB shares surge on earnings beat
CNBC
-
The Late Morning Rundown: June 2, 2023
CNBC
-
How I turned my love of 'real fruit' ice cream into $650K in sales
CNBC
-
Former Walmart CEO Bill Simon on what's next for the retail sector
CNBC
-
How UBS became Switzerland's mega bank
CNBC
-
Here's why Walmart is an outlier in a retail industry
CNBC
-
The Fed does need to keep raising rates, says former Fed Gov. Frederic Mishkin
CNBC
-
How A.I. is slashing time and costs in the customer service industry
CNBC
-
Telecom stocks drop on report that Amazon may offer mobile services to Prime members
CNBC
-
Jobs report suggests the economy is nowhere close to a recession, says Goldman Sachs’ Jan Hatzius
CNBC
-
Mortgage rates volatile on hot economic reads, debt ceiling debate
CNBC
-
Cramer’s Mad Dash on Five Below: It's a really well-run retailer
CNBC
-
Opening Bell: June 1, 2023
CNBC
-
Jim Cramer on May jobs report: This is why I'm going for a skip on rate hikes
CNBC