U.S. Treasury's Yellen says IRS needs to be 'completely redone'
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[January 23, 2023]
By Andrea Shalal
LUSAKA, Zambia (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on
Sunday said rebuilding the Internal Revenue Service would be one of her
top priorities in coming years, putting her squarely at odds with
Republicans who have taken control of the House of Representatives.
Yellen told Reuters in an interview on her way to Zambia that she was
thrilled that Congress had approved $80 billion in new funding to help
the agency reduce a huge backlog of tax returns and better hunt down
$600 billion in unpaid tax bills.
She said she decided to stay on as Treasury secretary in large part to
oversee implementation of legislation like the Inflation Reduction Act,
which included the IRS funding and passed on party lines last year.
Yellen lobbied hard for the extra funding to help the IRS deal with what
she called massive problems, including a "huge backlog" in working
through tax returns, and lack of personnel to carry out complicated
audits of higher-earning taxpayers.
"I’m excited about legislation that’s passed and I want to make sure
that it makes the difference it should make, and that includes the IRS,"
she said. "That agency needs to be completely redone, and it’s a big
task."
Republicans sought unsuccessfully to slash tens of billions in IRS
funding from the law.
The law also includes about $270 billion in tax credits for electric
vehicles, home solar panels and other climate purchases that will be
overseen by Treasury, which has made Yellen a pivotal climate figure in
President Joe Biden's administration.
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U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen
speaks during her interview with Reuters in New Delhi, India,
November 11, 2022. REUTERS/Altaf Hussain/File Photo
"I want to see that work progress. Maybe it’s not the sexiest kind
of stuff in the world, but I think if you want to make a difference
in the world, you have to have the follow-through," she said.
Yellen, 76, conceded that the split Congress reduced the chances of
passing legislation to advance Biden's agenda, but said she still
enjoyed the job.
Her decision to stay ended months of speculation that she would step
aside mid-way through Biden's four-year term.
"This is probably the last job I’ll have," Yellen said. I’d much
rather be doing this than sitting at home knitting sweaters, or
whatever it is one does when one’s retired."
And yes, she learned to knit in college, and even knit a "lovely
tennis sweater" for her husband, Nobel Prize-winning economist
George Akerlof.
One thing she is not looking forward to? Asked about the debate with
Congress over raising the debt ceiling, Yellen simply puts her hand
to her forehead and sighs.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Chris Reese)
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