Poor, Minority Areas More Likely To Have Paid Tax Preparers, Report Says
HuffPost
The largely unregulated industry often sees error-ridden returns and high fees, a justice group alleges.
Counties with a higher proportion of low-income or residents who are Black or Hispanic are more likely to also have storefront offices of paid tax preparers, according to a new report.
Paid preparers can often make mistakes in filing that can lead to errors or smaller refunds, and often leverage their services to charge high fees that offset cash from things like the Earned Income Tax Credit, wrote Portia Allen-Kyle, chief advisor at Color of Change, a racial justice group, in conjunction with Better IRS, a group supporting free, direct tax filing.
“Their preying on EITC claimants is not by accident or coincidence; exploiting low-income taxpayers is core to the business model of these companies,” Allen-Kyle wrote.
“Given the eligibility requirements for the EITC, these taxpayers often are in economically precarious positions and can fall prey to unscrupulous practices such as payday lending products that advance claimants their tax refund if they agree to let the tax preparation company skim off the top.”
By cross-referencing an IRS list of preparers, the annual IRS Statistics of Income data book on how returns are filed, and U.S. Census demographic data, Allen-Kyle found paid preparers more prevalent in counties with certain demographic features.