IRS Deputy Secretary announces expansion plans at Code For America Conference

Janet Yellen Secretary of the Treasury - Official website
Janet Yellen Secretary of the Treasury - Official website
0Comments

Thank you to Code for America for inviting me to speak at today’s conference about IRS Direct File, our new option for Americans to file their taxes for free.

Direct File is just one of many ways the IRS is working to save taxpayers time and money given the resources we now have due to the Inflation Reduction Act. We’re using those resources to do things like the successful Pilot Program that we just had for Direct File, where we’ve seen taxpayers all over the country ask the IRS to provide services like this, and I’m happy to be here today to announce that the Treasury Department and IRS are planning to make sure that Direct File is here to stay.

We’re excited to extend an open invitation to all 50 states to join Direct File starting next filing season. Our goal over the next few years is to make sure that Direct File is an available option for all working- and middle-class taxpayers who want to use it.

I want to recap how we arrived at this announcement. In just nine months, the IRS built a first-class technology product, with the look and feel of commercial software, using resources that were given to us by Congress, but resources the President fought for in the Inflation Reduction Act, that now allow the IRS working with U.S. Digital Service to follow best practices, starting small and extensively testing a product in phases. This approach paid off. There were no widespread outages, and the system was able to handle tens of thousands of returns a day in the last days of Filing Season.

This all speaks to the importance of the resources that the IRS has gotten through the Inflation Reduction Act, but also the ability of the IRS to work closely with partners like Code for America, who played an important role in making sure that states who wanted to sign up and work with the IRS made sure that Direct File was available in their state were able do so.

We know that partnerships with Code for America and organizations like yours are critical in making sure that government can provide world-class services like Direct File. As the IRS continues its efforts using Inflation Reduction Act money, it aims at making it easier for taxpayers take advantage of benefits they are owed—be it through Child Tax Credit or Earned Income Tax Credit—and file their taxes as cheaply and easily as possible. We look forward continuing partnership with Code for America.

Thank you allowing me speak before beginning this panel. But I want say again grateful hard-working men women IRS U.S. Digital Service but also work Code America organizations throughout country done make sure provide remarkable service products American people Thank you having me.



Related

Mary C. Daly, President and Chief Executive Officer - The Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

Research associates at SF Fed prepare for new opportunities after two years of service

Research associates at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco are moving on after two years supporting economic research efforts. The institution serves a broad region under its dual mandate while fostering economic stability across diverse communities.

Arvind Krishna, President and Chief Executive Officer at IBM Corporation - IBM Corporation

IBM and ServiceNow announce expanded collaboration to address enterprise AI challenges

IBM and ServiceNow have announced a new phase in their partnership aimed at overcoming key obstacles facing large-scale enterprise artificial intelligence deployments. The companies plan joint solutions targeting legacy system modernization as well as improved enterprise data readiness for AI.

Tiff Macklem Governor - Official website

G7 central banks release report on quantum technologies and financial system implications

The G7 Central Bank Quantum Technologies Working Group has published its first reference report analyzing how emerging quantum technologies may impact global finance. The document provides an analytical framework but does not make operational recommendations amid growing concerns over data security risks posed by advances in quantum computing.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from Monetary Brief.