I haven't had a chance to research this, but it sounds like, based on the amounts being tossed around here, this is an attempt to not allow ICs, the self-employed, gig workers, etc., to circumvent claiming income of less than $600 from any one vendor/client. It you don't get a 1099, you still have to claim it--to not do so is illegal. It's foolish, anyway, because by the time we deduct expenses, that amount less than $600 amounts to not much!
I remember being amazed when PayPal started reporting payouts of $20k and up. I remember thinking, "Why so high?" It seemed to make it easier for people to not claim non-W-2 income.
I'm reserving opinion on how I feel about this until I can read the facts for myself. But, really, people are right when they say that if the IRS or some other government agency wants to track down the money, they can and will. After all, MSCs report payments to shoppers as expenses--if the IRS wanted to match payouts to shoppers who earned less than $600 in a year (so didn't get a 1099), they could. I don't know why anyone who is self-employed would not report verifiable, documented income--if that's the problem some people have with this. I know that some self-employed don't report cash payments, but if they deposit the money in their bank accounts instead of stuffing it in their mattresses, then somebody can find it already. And if that person applies for, say, a mortgage, as someone else mentioned, they will have to either account for such deposits or explain how they happen to have 20% down payment on an income that doesn't show enough to have that much. If it's a gift, it has to be documented. So, even now, cash gifts to others can't be "hidden" all the time. I had real-estate clients once who made a lot of money in their business, but didn't claim all of it, didn't bank all of it, and didn't have established credit. They had enough $$ for a down payment, but didn't meet any of the other criteria. I worked with them for years advising them, and had them talk to my mortgage broker, before they finally started doing what they needed to do to get a mortgage. It did not pay off for them to avoid paying the IRS.
I imagine this won't affect the rules around gifts of cash to people such as one's children.
I learn something new every day, but not everyday!
I've learned to never trust spell-check or my phone's auto-fill feature.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 10/01/2021 02:27AM by BirdyC.