According to the Internal Revenue Service, the total number of
returns received in the week ending Feb. 1, 16.04 million, was
down 12.4 percent from the week that ended on Feb. 2, 2018. Only
13.31 million returns were processed, down 25.8 percent from the
year before. The average refund of $1,865 was 8.4 percent
smaller than the average refund in the period last year.
The partial government shutdown - at 35 days, the longest in
U.S. history - ended three days before the tax filing season
officially opened on Jan. 28. The final deadline is Apr. 15.
Republicans passed a $1.5 trillion tax overhaul in the final
weeks of 2017 that cut rates for both individuals and
corporations, giving fellow Republican Trump a major policy
victory. Democrats had warned that the cuts and other changes in
the overhaul would primarily benefit the country's wealthiest,
and many are eager to see how it will affect average Americans.
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in a statement on Friday
that the 2019 "filing season has successfully launched with
millions of tax returns having been filed."
(Reporting by Lisa Lambert)
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