Under Reporting

Under Reporting

Under reporting is a term describing the crime of intentionally reporting less income or revenue than was actually received. And in 2019, the U.S. tax authority revealed that under reporting accounted for about $352 billion of the United States' $441 billion tax gap — the difference between taxes owed and taxes actually paid — in the 2011-2013 tax years. In fact, the billions of dollars of tax-loss revenue caused by under reporting reduces the funds the federal government relies on to finance Social Security, Medicare, and a host of other programs. Under reporting is the deliberate criminal act of reporting less income or revenue than was actually received. The tax loss revenue that results from under reporting may ultimately slash the funds that Social Security, Medicare, and other federal programs need to finance their outgoing expenditures.

Under reporting is the deliberate criminal act of reporting less income or revenue than was actually received.

What Is Under Reporting?

Under reporting is a term describing the crime of intentionally reporting less income or revenue than was actually received. Companies and individuals chiefly under report their incomings in an effort to avoid or reduce their respective tax liabilities.

Under reporting is not a victimless crime. In fact, the billions of dollars of tax-loss revenue caused by under reporting reduces the funds the federal government relies on to finance Social Security, Medicare, and a host of other programs.

Under reporting is the deliberate criminal act of reporting less income or revenue than was actually received.
The tax loss revenue that results from under reporting may ultimately slash the funds that Social Security, Medicare, and other federal programs need to finance their outgoing expenditures.
Under reporting may be committed by public companies and by individuals alike.
Those who purposely under report may face fiscal penalties, criminal consequences, or both.

Understanding Under Reporting

If a struggling public company experiences a sharp drop in its share price, it may report even lower revenues for a fiscal quarter than it actually earned during that time period. This is done merely for optical purposes. The trick is to hide revenues and then subsequently lump those hidden figures with the revenues in the following quarter's earnings statement, so that onlookers are led to believe that the company has rebounded and is now in much better shape.

The appearance of a more successful quarter can inspire investors, and ultimately boost a company's stock price. Naturally, this form of under reporting is also an illegal practice.

Companies listed on stock exchanges aren't the only culprits. In fact, in most cases, it's usually self-employed filers and those who earn cash income that are most likely to under report their incomes. The primary goal here is to reduce tax liabilities and pocket a higher percentage of any money made.

Wage and salary employees typically do not under report their incomes, because their earnings are usually directly reported to the IRS by third parties--namely, their employers.

During the 1990s, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) estimated that as much as 84% of cash tips, worth hundreds of millions of dollars each year, were going unreported. And in 2019, the U.S. tax authority revealed that under reporting accounted for about $352 billion of the United States' $441 billion tax gap — the difference between taxes owed and taxes actually paid — in the 2011-2013 tax years.

Under reporting accounted for approximately 80% of the U.S. tax gap in the 2011-2013 tax years.

Consequences of Under Reporting

Individuals and companies that are caught under reporting may be subject to fiscal penalties, and in extreme cases, might even face criminal charges.

However, it's important to remember that under reporting is only a crime if offenders willfully disregard the tax code. If this action occurs due to negligence or calculation errors, the IRS could penalize the under reporting company or individual without initiating criminal action against those parties.

For example, if a waitress one night distractedly back pockets a few bills, rather than consolidating them with the rest of her take, this act of negligence won't likely result in criminal punishment. Only if investigators determine that willful tax evasion or fraud has occurred will that waitress be at risk of a felony conviction.

Related terms:

Additional Paid-In Capital (APIC)

Additional paid-in capital is the excess amount paid by an investor above the par value price of a stock during an initial public offering (IPO). read more

Estimated Tax

Estimated tax is a quarterly payment that is required of self-employed people and business owners who do not have taxes automatically withheld. read more

Income

Income is money received in return for working, providing a product or service, or investing capital. A pension or a gift is also income. read more

What Is the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)?

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is the U.S. federal agency that oversees the collection of taxes—primarily income taxes—and the enforcement of tax laws. read more

Medicare

Medicare is a U.S. government program providing healthcare insurance to individuals 65 and older or those under 65 who meet eligibility requirements. read more

Payroll

Payroll is the compensation a business must pay to its employees for a set period or on a given date. Read about payroll accounting here. read more

Public Company

A public company is a corporation whose ownership is distributed amongst general public shareholders through publicly-traded stock shares. read more

Quarter (Q1, Q2, Q3, Q4)

A quarter is a three-month period on a company's financial calendar that acts as a basis for the reporting of earnings and the paying of dividends. read more

Revenue

Revenue is the income generated from normal business operations. read more

Self-Employment

A self-employed individual does not work for a specific employer who pays them a consistent salary or wage. read more