> At this rate soon nobody will be able to file their own taxes without an accountant to sort through the muck. And complicated to systems tend to benefit the wealthy.
It also heavily benefits Quicken. Along with HR Block, they heavily lobby against any effort that simplifies the tax code. Capitalism, American-style.
Intuit is a pretty funny company. They try to make TurboTax as simple as possible for the average American (most Americans can fill out a 1040EZ and be done in minutes), but at the same time try to make taxes as complicated as possible so that they can sell services around that. It's both smart and infuriating .
Intuit's position isn't necessarily pro-complexity, they'd actually prefer the tax code simplified somewhat, because they'd need far fewer employees to update the tax code information in the software every year. The lobbying is to keep the IRS from A) releasing free 1040EZ/A software and B) keep the IRS from simplifying even further and just sending you a bill, like HMRC does.
It's somewhat infuriating that the IRS doesn't just send you a bill. It has full data on every form you put into TurboTax. It runs its own calculations independently and checks them against your return. It has full knowledge of the tax code. If you disagree with it, the IRS just tacks on penalties & interest and eventually garnishes your wages. Why not just send a bill?
It also heavily benefits Quicken. Along with HR Block, they heavily lobby against any effort that simplifies the tax code. Capitalism, American-style.