What they are reporting is true. A lot of people had small incremental tax benefits in their paychecks that were probably offset by higher Health costs so they didn't really notice any benefit and now their refund is much lower so they're bitching up a storm
95% of people had their taxes go down. Any "reporting" of anecdotes which leads people to believe otherwise is simply propaganda at this point. #enemyofthepeople
Read the articles. Refunds are down, and they reported that refunds are down.
#actualnews
“The people who file early are the people who generally count on these refunds. They may have an expectation of higher refunds,” he said. These taxpayers, especially those who hold down multiple jobs, could be in for a rude awakening.
This was what happened to Jason Marques, a postal worker, pizza delivery driver and student in Massachusetts who said that, since his income didn’t change, he was expecting a similar refund to the roughly $6,000 he got last year — money he said would go towards his student loans or paying off credit card debt.
Marques said he was hurt by the cap on student loan interest deduction and the elimination of non-reimbursed business expenses, which he used to deduct the out-of-pocket costs he incurred as a delivery driver. “My jaw hit the floor,” he said, when he learned his 2018 refund would be under $500.
For the most part, its just people whose withholding have gone down. But they are bitching on social media.
Marques is not alone in his frustration. Early filers have been taking to social media to express their ire at finding that their refunds were a fraction of what they anticipated or — worse yet — that they would owe an unexpected bill to the IRS.
“That campaign promise was one of the only two reasons I voted for you,” wrote Twitter user Dee Nelson. “Rethinking that decision now.”
@realDonaldTrump just did my taxes and thanks for increasing mine!! No change in income and got back $400 less than last year. That campaign promise was one of the only two reasons I voted for you. Rethinking that decision now.
Meh, there are several sources in the article and it pretty much spells out the variables that are at play here.
I do alot of friends and family pro-bono work so I will provide some anecdotal examples.
Based upon your tax knowledge on display here, they should demand a refund.
Based upon your tax knowledge on display here, they should demand a refund.
I don’t know what the argument here is. The GOP and other supporting foundations and think tanks even said this was going to happen but tried to kind of gloss over it. Most people were going to save some money, but they wanted people to feel the effect right away to boost midterms (complete failure) so the IRS changed the withholding calculations so if you normally got a refund as that lump sum you got an extra 50-100 dollars in your paycheck every two weeks. So tax time comes and you think sweet I should be getting the refund I get every year but instead that refund was paid out in 26 installments. Now you’re an average dumb person so you think shit I owe more taxes these tax cut sucked, because turns out an extra 50 dollars a month and receiving your refund spread out in your paycheck isn’t as awesome as Palma made the crumbs out to be.