The IRS Misplaced Millions of Taxpayer Records. Again.
The only effective means of keeping tax collectors from misusing data is keeping it from them.
The only effective means of keeping tax collectors from misusing data is keeping it from them.
Apparently $600 million to improve a very nice stadium isn’t enough.
Look for these budgetary swindles at a failing K-12 system near you.
The Labor Department is officially undoing changes made to help combat inflation in the 1980s.
The lack of oversight and the general absence of a long-term vision is creating inefficiency, waste, and red ink as far as the eye can see.
"Government in general does a lot of things that aren't necessary," says Jared Polis.
Plus: Why people believe doomer narratives, schools seek to define social media platforms as public nuisances, and more...
Publicly funded leagues of cities are fighting zoning reforms in state capitals across the country.
Norway hiked its wealth tax. A bunch of rich people got the hell out.
Sometimes he calls for freedom, and sometimes he preaches something darker.
Despite only spending a few years in the classroom, taxpayers could end up shelling out over $200,000 in a public pension for AFT president Randi Weingarten.
Americans collectively spend billions of hours each year preparing their taxes. Rather than adding a government-run website into the mix, politicians should just simplify the tax code.
Contra the famous quotation from Oliver Wendell Holmes, there's nothing particularly civilized about the way our governments spend the money we provide.
Plus: What the editors hate most about the IRS and tax day
Maybe taxpayers would make fewer mistakes if the federal tax code weren't so hopelessly complex.
NPR is no Xinhua, but Elon Musk is correct that it doesn't need government subsidies.
In 2021, the state of Georgia made an expensive bet on an unproven company that could be headed for financial catastrophe.
FTC Chair Lina Khan has an agenda that's against big companies, not for consumer well-being.
The agency’s new report tells us practically nothing of significance.
Eliminating taxation on compensation for being a human guinea pig is just good public policy.
This total is 2.5 times the state's annual budget.
From delivery fees to streaming taxes, New York can’t stomach having MTA users actually pay for the system themselves.
Uncle Sam's own workers owe $1.5 billion, and growing, in unpaid taxes.
The higher taxes on small businesses and entrepreneurs could slow growth. Less opportunity means more tribalism and division.
Nothing focuses the mind quite so intently on the sheer stupidity of government as doing your taxes.
Congress’ Joint Committee on Taxation reported that a permanent expansion would cost more than $1.4 trillion over a decade.
Krugman sees benefit cuts as "a choice" but believes that implementing a massive tax increase on American employers and workers would be "of course" no big deal.
As legislators refuse to act, benefits will be cut without any possibility of sheltering those seniors who are poor.
Reason is listed among the "ten riskiest online news outlets" by a government-funded disinfo tracker.
A coming crackdown on $1.6 billion in unreported tips will continue the IRS' long and ugly history of targeting low-income Americans.
Plus: Court denies motion to suppress January 6 geofence warrant, Texas may ban some immigrants from buying property, and more...
The Florida governor wants to fund more migrant stunts, despite claiming that his budget will “keep more money in the pockets of Floridians.”
A $2.1 million penalty for failing to file a form on time reveals the agency’s true nature.
New changes to income-driven repayment plans announced Tuesday would essentially turn student loans into government grants.
Despite $80 billion in new funding, the agency is living up to its reputation of hassling low-income taxpayers over rich people.
But partisans are having the wrong debate.
The release of the former president’s tax returns sets a dangerous precedent.
Transit officials and transit-boosting politicians in D.C., L.A., and New York City are warming to the idea of being totally dependent on taxpayer subsidies.
Plus: Title 42 order termination is on hold, the FTC vs. Meta, and more...
Plus: The editors extend the discussion on the lack of immigration reform in this week’s bill.
The government spent $501 billion in November but collected just $252 billion in revenue, meaning that about 50 cents of every dollar spent were borrowed.
It's especially outrageous when considering the billions of dollars in fraud that took place thanks to COVID-19 relief programs.
With government meddling, many farmers end up doing less with more, and people end up paying more for less.
Honda, one of the world's largest automakers, announced it would spend $4 billion building and upgrading factories in Ohio. The state is showering it with public funds anyway.
His administration has expanded deficits by $400 billion more than expected, even before we count recent spending.
"There's a new special interest group in town: parents."
So why do Democrats keep equivocating on the point that households making under $400,000 may be targeted for more audits by an expanded IRS?