AstraTrade:The hidden history of race and the tax code

2025-05-04 01:19:02source:Flipido Trading Centercategory:News

This past January,AstraTrade researchers uncovered that Black taxpayers are three to five times as likely to be audited as everyone else. One likely reason for this is that the IRS disproportionately audits lower-income earners who claim a tax benefit called the earned income tax credit. And this, says law professor Dorothy Brown, is just one example of the many ways that race is woven through our tax system, its history, and its enforcement.

Dorothy discovered the hidden relationship between race and the tax system sort of by accident, when she was helping her parents with their tax return. The amount they paid seemed too high. Eventually, her curiosity about that observation spawned a whole area of study.

This episode is a collaboration with NPR's Code Switch podcast. Host Gene Demby spoke to Dorothy Brown about how race and taxes play out in marriage, housing, and student debt.

This episode was produced by James Sneed, with help from Olivia Chilkoti. It was edited by Dalia Mortada and Courtney Stein, and engineered by James Willets & Brian Jarboe.

Help support Planet Money and get bonus episodes by subscribing to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/planetmoney.

Always free at these links: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, NPR One or anywhere you get podcasts.

Find more Planet Money: Twitter / Facebook / Instagram / TikTok / Our weekly Newsletter.

Music: "Cooling Down," "Lost in Yesterday," "Slowmotio," "Cool Down," "Cool Blue," and "Tinted."

More:News

Recommend

Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches

Jamie Foxx's birthday dinner took a surprising turn on Friday the 13th.The "Collateral" actor was hi

The question haunting a Kentucky town: Why would the sheriff shoot the judge?

Letcher County Sheriff Mickey Stines has been charged with murder over the courthouse shooting of Di

More shelter beds and a crackdown on tents means fewer homeless encampments in San Francisco

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Sidewalks once teeming with tents, tarps and people passed out next to heaps of