It seems to me
that the underlying reason for the existence of any labor or trade union, or
professional membership organization like the AICPA, is to get as many benefits
as possible, financial and otherwise, for, and lobby to protect, its membership
– regardless of whether or not the benefits and lobbying are appropriate, or
whether or not providing the benefits, or what they lobby for, does harm or
damage, financial or otherwise, to any other party or parties. Their existence is purely selfish in nature–
as I guess it should be.
For example,
the actions and lobbying of the AICPA is solely for the purpose of lining the
pockets of, and reducing competition for, their CPA members. They don’t care if what they lobby for is
morally or ethically “correct” or “appropriate”, or if what they want comes at
the expense of, or does harm to, non-CPA groups and individuals. They are not interested in proper tax
administration, or what is in the best interests of individual and
taxpayers. They only care what is in the
best interests of CPAs, and act accordingly.
Case in point –
the AICPA opposes anything that gives additional credibility to Enrolled Agents
or to “unenrolled” tax preparers. If
they oppose tax preparer regulation it is because they do not want taxpayers to
think non-CPA preparers who receive IRS “approval” or credentials are as good
as, or closer to reality better than, CPA tax preparers. They think they “own” the tax preparation profession
and want to keep it that way. When they
do support any regulation of preparers they expect to be exempt from its
requirements.
While Enrolled
Agents do have the National Association of Enrolled Agents to promote and
protect members, and lobby on the behalf of members, more ethically and
appropriately than the AICPA, “unenrolled” preparers do not have an equivalent
of AICPA or NAEA.
There is NATP
and NSTP – but these organizations are geared more for providing quality
education and resources for members. While
they do speak to legislation and IRS issues occasionally on a basic level, and
do promote their members, they do NOT act affirmatively to protect members via aggressive lobbying against legislation and
government rules and regulations that adversely affect members.
Unenrolled tax
preparers, or more to point non-CPA members of the tax preparation industry,
truly need a loud and aggressive voice in Washington
But I see a
lobbying organization for tax preparers representing the interests of ALL
preparers - EAs, the “unenrolled” and CPAs, actually all PTIN-holders - and
dealing with the concerns that are common to all preparers. Unlike the AICPA, this organization would not
attempt to portray that one class of preparer – the unenrolled and/or the
Enrolled Agent – is “more better” than another – the CPA. The competence and appropriateness of a tax
preparer should be determined and judged on the combination of the specific
qualities and qualifications – knowledge, training, experience, remaining
current, pricing and practices - of the individual preparer.
Its purpose
would NOT be to promote tax preparers, or one class of tax preparer, in the
eyes of the public, but to protect ALL tax return preparers from the imposition
of excessive and inappropriate rules and regulations by Congress and the IRS.
Your thoughts?
TAFN
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