GOP senator: Your smaller tax refund is not the point

Updated

The IRS’s initial reports of lower tax refunds have colored the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, a key Republican achievement, in a negative light. And it’s been irritating Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa.

Speaking to reporters on Feb. 13, the Senate Finance Committee chair was frustrated about the messaging around tax season.

"Isn’t it kind of stupid to look at a refund,” Grassley mused. “What your refund is — that doesn’t tell you what taxes you pay."

Though a refund would provide an indication of tax level in instances in which someone does not change their withholding after a change in the tax law, Grassley is right. A refund is not the same thing as a tax bill.

"What taxes you pay is: compare what you’re going to do in 2019 vs what you did in 2018. The bottom line is the answer," he said. "I’m frustrated that people as individual taxpayers may think their refund is the answer to how much taxes they actually paid.”

FILE - This May 8, 2008, file photo shows blank checks on an idle press at the Philadelphia Regional Financial Center, which disburses payments on behalf of federal agencies, in Philadelphia. The IRS is delaying tax refunds for millions of low-income families as the agency steps up efforts to combat identity theft and fraud. Starting in 2017, a federal law requires the tax agency to delay refunds until Feb. 15 for people who claim the earned income tax credit and the additional child tax credit. The IRS says processing times will delay most of the refunds until the end of February. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)
(AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

Grassley continued, noting he was more frustrated with “well-educated” politicians, who are “leading the public to believe that their refund has to do with the amount of taxes they’re actually paying.”

For many people who are in high-tax states, the state and local tax (SALT) deduction’s new cap will cause lots of tax bills to rise. But in others, the higher standard deduction and lower tax brackets will result in tax savings.

But perhaps one of the primary causes of the refund turmoil was the IRS’s botched withholding tables. According to a report from the Government Accountability Office released in August 2018, over 20% of Americans aren’t withholding enough money in their paychecks, and thus would end up owing money to the IRS at tax time.

A recent note from UBS’s economics team may put it best: “Nobody—not us, not other economists, not the U.S. government—knows whether refunds will be larger or smaller than in past years.”

Ethan Wolff-Mann is a writer at Yahoo Finance focusing on consumer issues, personal finance, retail, airlines, and more. Follow him on Twitter @ewolffmann.

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