No Tax on Tips? The Future of the IRS in a Changing Economy is a deep exploration of how America's tax system actually works, how it came to be, and why it remains one of the most important and controversial forces shaping modern life.
This book traces the evolution of the Internal Revenue Service from its origins in early American resistance to British taxation, through the creation of the income tax, and into the modern digital era where AI, automation, gig work, and real-time financial systems are reshaping how income is reported and collected. It breaks down complex systems in a clear, narrative style that connects history, policy, and everyday experience.
Along the way, it explores major turning points in U.S. tax history, including wartime expansions, the 16th Amendment, payroll withholding, and the rise of electronic filing. It also brings the reader into today's most pressing debates: whether tips should be taxed, how gig economy income is tracked, what fairness really means in a progressive system, and whether emerging technologies could fundamentally replace traditional tax structures.
Rather than treating taxation as purely technical, this book frames it as something much bigger: a reflection of national priorities, political conflict, economic behavior, and public trust. It examines how the IRS operates today, why it is often misunderstood, and how digital transformation is pushing the system toward automation and real-time reporting.
Ultimately, this is a book about more than taxes. It is about how a country funds itself, how systems evolve under pressure, and how society negotiates the balance between fairness, efficiency, and simplicity in an increasingly complex economy.