Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

You can file taxes without a software package, if you want. You have to file because they want you to report things they don't know about, and also if you want to claim itemized deductions.


Here in Norway, the government fills out our tax forms for us with all of the information that has been reported to them by our banks, our employers, etc. It is then our responsibility as tax payers to look over the tax forms, add anything not included, and adding any additional claims for deductions.

By comparison, the needless busywork that the IRS puts the tax payers through is nothing short of ridiculous really. It only serves to waste time and effort, and there is plain and simple no reason whatsoever why the IRS could not do it like Norwegian tax authorities does. Our system here in Norway is not perfect either, but the citizens of the United States, and the US government, would benefit hugely from a tax filing system built to help you file taxes the way that ours does for us.


The basic elements are not much busywork at all. For a person with only wage income, or maybe even a little interest & dividend income and perhaps one contracting payout, its pretty simple.

The busywork comes mostly from the arcane and convoluted nature of US tax code, notably the parts that describe deductions and credits. US governments use such things as a way to implement policy, and the crap just piles up over time. Can you deduct X? How much of X can you deduct? Are you eligible for a credit? Or just part of a credit? Or none of it? etc. etc.


It'd be great if they just billed me and I was on the hook for correcting them however. The current method is doing math homework under penalty of being fined.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: