Gilithin, on 2023-May-20, 21:58, said:
At the upper income levels the tax laws seem to be a maze, with prizes for those who can twist the law in their favor. But even at lower levels it can get complex.
I started grad school in 1960 and had a teaching assistanceship, about 3K for the academic year, and I worked in the summer. I paid taxes. Then the government decided that teaching assistanceships were part salary, taxable, and part fellowship, non-taxable. Unfortunately, "part" was vague. I and others called the IRS to learn which part was which. We found that if you call three times you get three different answers. I did whatever I thought was right. I was not audited, probably partly because no one knew just what was what, but also because even if an audit found that I owed money the amount would not cover the cost of the audit.
I guess the rule making part of the assistanceship non-taxable was well-intended, but not well thought out. I think this happens often, and of course there are other times when the tricky rules are not at all well-intended. Well-intended for the rich, but not for the rest of us.
So yes, I agree. I agree that simplifying would be good and I agree that the economy might well collapse before our leaders do an honest job of simplifying.