Taxing News

Tax season is here. Now comes the worry that you may be audited. The thought of digging out old receipts and documents may have you howling, but check your resentment at the door—or it may cost you.

According to Loyola University psychologist Loretta Stalans, Ph.D., taxpayers' beliefs about audits have a nasty habit of becoming self-fulfilling prophecies: If you expect unfair treatment from an auditor, you're more likely to get it.

It's not that auditors are mind readers. What happens, explains Stalans, is that taxpayers who expect unfair treatment fail to establish rapport with their auditors. And in an audit, a cordial relationship with your auditor can save you a lot of hassle—and maybe some money.

The reason: Auditors are more likely to bend the rules if they believe a taxpayer is trying his best to comply with tax laws. "The auditor may accept an explanation that records were lost during a move, or that your ex-wife destroyed them;' Stalans says. "That's going to affect the bottom line."

A taxpayer who expects unfair treatment, on the other hand, is more likely to act aloof or behave uncooperatively, leading the auditor to assume that he or she is being intentionally noncompliant. In such cases, Stalans found, auditors were five times more likely to assert their authority by, say, rejecting an extension request or a taxpayer's excuse.

Surprisingly, auditors are most willing to ignore a misplaced receipt when the tax laws or departmental protocol provide a clearcut solution to a dispute. But when the legal situation is murky, pragmatism holds sway: Auditors consider whether enforcing a statute by the books is worth the time, effort, and tax liability involved.

Stalans examined audits performed by the state of Oregon. But she says the conclusions may extend not only to the IRS, but to dealing with authorities like police. Studies have shown, for example, that cops tend to cooperate with citizens who act respectfully, and to strictly enforce the law when a potential suspect acts rudely.

Tags: attitude, audit, audits, cordial relationship, extension request, IRS, legal situation, loyola university, mind readers, nasty habit, police studies, pragmatism, receipts, self fulfilling prophecies, state of oregon, sway, tax liability, taxes, taxpayers, time effort, unfair treatment, university psychologist

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