Some tax forms ask information that seems to have no effect on the bottom line. No matter how you answer the question, your tax bill is the same either way. In Europe, this sort of thing would violate the data minimization principle of the GDPR. So the question is, what happens to people who either leave the intrusive fields blank, or they give bogus info? I’ve heard that tax penalties are generally a constant × the amount of underpayment. If underpayment is zero then so is the penalty, correct?

You are viewing a single thread.
View all comments View context
2 points

I know in Canada foreign assets relate to eligibility for certain offices, although that’s not a tax.

permalink
report
parent
reply

US Law (local/state/federal)

!law_us@lemmy.sdf.org

Create post

This is the only decentralized venue for chatter about law in the US. Federal law and law of various states and territories is on topic here.

Loosely related:

Community stats

  • 57

    Monthly active users

  • 9

    Posts

  • 41

    Comments

Community moderators