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Friends, Romans, Taxpayers

April 22, 2025 by Bill Bourbonnais

The world’s first tax, imposed 3,000 years BC, was called the “heqat,” and it required farmers to pay 20% of their harvest to the pharaoh. Given what we know about human nature, we can assume the first efforts to avoid the heqat began around 2,999 BC. Thus began a fiscal arms race that persists until today.

Filed Under: taxes Tagged With: tax, tax reduction, tax savings, tax strategy, taxes, taxpolicy, wealth tax

Follow the Bouncing Ball

April 1, 2025 by Bill Bourbonnais

For decades, Republicans have been the party of tax cuts. But now, those at the top of the financial food chain may find themselves in for a surprise that reflects the Republican party’s evolution from the party of the rich to the party of the working class.

Filed Under: tax cuts and jobs act, taxes, TCJA Tagged With: IRS, tax, tax reduction, tax savings, tax strategy, taxes, taxpolicy, wealth tax

Jump Into the Void

March 26, 2025 by Bill Bourbonnais

Don’t look now, but April 15 is almost here! Ordinarily, that means money gushing in for our friends at the IRS. Last year, they took in $5.1 trillion, or 95% of all government revenue. Since then, the economy has grown 2.8%, suggesting we should see a similarly sized increase in revenue.

Filed Under: Artificial Intelligence, taxes, TCJA Tagged With: IRS, tax, tax savings, tax strategy, taxpolicy, wealth tax

Can You Use a 1031 Exchange When Buying for Family? Here’s What You Need to Know

March 20, 2025 by Bill Bourbonnais

If you’re planning to buy a rental property for your son, or any other related person, especially as part of a 1031 exchange strategy, here’s what you need to know.

Filed Under: taxes Tagged With: 1031, aggregation, capital gain, IRS, passive loss, real estate, reverse 1031, suspended loss, tax, tax savings, tax strategy, taxes

Wanted: Dead or Alive

March 19, 2025 by Bill Bourbonnais

It’s no secret Uncle Sam has been living above his means. He hasn’t balanced his budget since 2001. He put trillions on his American Express card to pay for Covid relief. And now, as he struggles to extend the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 later this year, he’s fighting to flesh out a budget resolution that authorizes $86 trillion in spending through 2034. If he was your real uncle, you might be googling “Debtors Anonymous” meetings in your neighborhood.

Filed Under: taxes Tagged With: auditstrategy, businesstaxes, IRS, tax, tax strategy, taxes, taxnews, taxplanning, taxpolicy, taxrelief

Pizza Pizza

March 11, 2025 by Bill Bourbonnais

In 2016, the curtain rose on Ben Affleck’s movie, The Accountant. Spoiler alert: he’s not just an accountant. Sure, the character Christian Wolff spends his workdays laundering money for the mob. But what accountant doesn’t do that? (Well, besides us.) No, the real surprise is that he’s a stone-cold killer, taking out 28 characters in the course of a meandering, two-hour plot. If you watch closely enough, you’ll even see one guy get killed twice.

Filed Under: taxes Tagged With: IRS, tax, taxpolicy, taxrelief, writeoff

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