Government Technology - April 2008 - (Page 56) signal: noise BY PAUL W. TAY LO R CHIEF STRATEGY OFFICER CENTER FOR DIGITAL GOVERNMENT Tax Truce Through Platform Parity? W ith April 15 looming, taxpayers are anxiously calculating their returns. Some defer to fullservice accountants and preparers; others take the self-service approach. Old-schoolers opt for forms, calculators and the trusty No. 2 HB pencil — while the digitally inclined choose between shrink-wrapped software packages and online services. With at least half of all states facing budget shortfalls, government officials are anxiously watching this tax-filing season. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities reports that the first 20 states to release estimates have a combined fiscal 2009 shortfall of $34 billion. In response, some states are seeking novel sources of revenue. New York is considering a page from the 1998 tobacco settlement by securitizing lottery proceeds — purchasing loans from lenders, grouping the loans and issuing bonds on the groups. New Jersey is looking at bonds to cover growing public debts, as well as increasing fees and privatizing toll roads and bridges. California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger suggested a 10 percent across-the-board cut to offset the state’s $14.5 billion deficit. Even fiscally healthy states are expected to avoid budget problems only until 2010. In the current political climate, raising taxes remains less palatable than cutting programs — but there’s heightened interest in collecting more of what’s already owed, which brings us back to this filing season. Taxes are as certain as death and controversial enough to spark historic revolutions and contemporary revolts. They are the fuel of government operations, and their filing is among the most contentious and competitive spaces in public-sector IT — pitting tax agencies, consumer tax software companies and the wider integrator-led technology industry against one another. A word of disclosure here: I have friends in each of the competing camps and have done work for most of them, so to paraphrase the country lawyer, “I have clients on both sides of the issue and I stand with my clients.” That said, here are where the lines are drawn. Tax authorities in states such as California and Arkansas offer direct online tax filing and payment services, built in concert with integrators and their partners that are steeped in the design-build-operate business model. That has left the tax software industry on the outside looking in, despite its migration from shrink-wrapped shiny discs to online services. Tax software companies — Intuit chief among them — have long worried about displacement by government-provided percent of all tax returns filed electronically by 2007. The new goal is to “provide universal access to individual taxpayers filing their tax returns directly through the IRS Web site.” That would effectively end the Alliance. But it would be a mistake to count tax software players out, particularly as government comes to terms with software as a service (SaaS) and the industry adopts new business models. Consider Intuit’s purchase of an online banking service last year. In a New York Times interview, former Intuit CEO Stephen Bennett described the purpose behind the acquisition in SaaS-like terms, “Our vision is our online softwareas-a-service suite that integrates all the data flow that makes it one place … to do online banking, bill payment and customer management.” Importantly the service is sold to (and co-branded or privately branded with) In the current political climate, raising taxes remains less palatable than cutting programs — but there’s heightened interest in collecting more of what’s already owed, which brings us back to this filing season. banks and other financial institutions, not end-users. It may put this kind of transactional service at the heart of an end-to-end solution, a place where shrink-wrapped products could never have gone. Banking today, tax filing tomorrow? After five seasons of experimentation, with a requisite amount of elbow throwing and trash talking in legislatures and other arenas, a SaaS-like platform may level the tax-filing playing field for titans and expansion teams alike. Game on. direct filing services. In 2003, the software companies’ answer was to create the Free File Alliance, a public-private partnership between the IRS, about 20 private tax software companies and 20 states where the Alliance provides free filing to 70 percent of U.S. taxpayers based on income. Reflecting Free File’s philanthropic origins, members have extended gratis e-filing to more than 15 million poor and underserved taxpayers. Today some in Washington, D.C., are trying to move the goal posts away from the 1998 goal set by Congress to have 80 APR_08 56 http://www.govtech.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Government Technology - April 2008 Government Technology - April 2008 Contents Point of View Big Picture The Last Mile On the Scene Four Questions for... Freeze Frame How Safe Is Your Data? Easy Street Gadget Overload Indiana Overhaul First Person: A Better Bill Data Defense Strength in Numbers Public Storage Products Two Cents Spectrum Personal Computing signal:noise Government Technology - April 2008 Government Technology - April 2008 - Government Technology - April 2008 (Page 1) Government Technology - April 2008 - Government Technology - April 2008 (Page 2) Government Technology - April 2008 - Government Technology - April 2008 (Page 3) Government Technology - April 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Government Technology - April 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Government Technology - April 2008 - Contents (Page 6) Government Technology - April 2008 - Contents (Page 7) Government Technology - April 2008 - Point of View (Page 8) Government Technology - April 2008 - Point of View (Page 9) Government Technology - April 2008 - Big Picture (Page 10) Government Technology - April 2008 - Big Picture (Page 11) Government Technology - April 2008 - The Last Mile (Page 12) Government Technology - April 2008 - The Last Mile (Page 13) Government Technology - April 2008 - On the Scene (Page 14) Government Technology - April 2008 - On the Scene (Page 15) Government Technology - April 2008 - Four Questions for... (Page 16) Government Technology - April 2008 - Four Questions for... (Page 17) Government Technology - April 2008 - Freeze Frame (Page 18) Government Technology - April 2008 - Freeze Frame (Page 19) Government Technology - April 2008 - Freeze Frame (Page 20) Government Technology - April 2008 - Freeze Frame (Page 21) Government Technology - April 2008 - Freeze Frame (Page 22) Government Technology - April 2008 - Freeze Frame (Page 23) Government Technology - April 2008 - Freeze Frame (Page 24) Government Technology - April 2008 - Freeze Frame (Page 25) Government Technology - April 2008 - How Safe Is Your Data? (Page 26) Government Technology - April 2008 - How Safe Is Your Data? (Page H1) Government Technology - April 2008 - How Safe Is Your Data? (Page H2) Government Technology - April 2008 - How Safe Is Your Data? (Page 27) Government Technology - April 2008 - How Safe Is Your Data? (Page 28) Government Technology - April 2008 - How Safe Is Your Data? (Page 29) Government Technology - April 2008 - How Safe Is Your Data? (Page 30) Government Technology - April 2008 - How Safe Is Your Data? (Page 31) Government Technology - April 2008 - Easy Street (Page 32) Government Technology - April 2008 - Easy Street (Page 33) Government Technology - April 2008 - Easy Street (Page 34) Government Technology - April 2008 - Easy Street (Page 35) Government Technology - April 2008 - Gadget Overload (Page 36) Government Technology - April 2008 - Gadget Overload (Page 37) Government Technology - April 2008 - Gadget Overload (Page 38) Government Technology - April 2008 - Gadget Overload (Page 39) Government Technology - April 2008 - Indiana Overhaul (Page 40) Government Technology - April 2008 - Indiana Overhaul (Page 41) Government Technology - April 2008 - First Person: A Better Bill (Page 42) Government Technology - April 2008 - First Person: A Better Bill (Page CA1) Government Technology - April 2008 - First Person: A Better Bill (Page CA2) Government Technology - April 2008 - First Person: A Better Bill (Page CA3) Government Technology - April 2008 - First Person: A Better Bill (Page CA4) Government Technology - April 2008 - First Person: A Better Bill (Page CA5) Government Technology - April 2008 - First Person: A Better Bill (Page CA6) Government Technology - April 2008 - First Person: A Better Bill (Page CA7) Government Technology - April 2008 - First Person: A Better Bill (Page CA8) Government Technology - April 2008 - First Person: A Better Bill (Page 43) Government Technology - April 2008 - Data Defense (Page 44) Government Technology - April 2008 - Data Defense (Page 45) Government Technology - April 2008 - Strength in Numbers (Page 46) Government Technology - April 2008 - Strength in Numbers (Page 47) Government Technology - April 2008 - Public Storage (Page 48) Government Technology - April 2008 - Public Storage (Page 49) Government Technology - April 2008 - Public Storage (Page 50) Government Technology - April 2008 - Public Storage (Page 51) Government Technology - April 2008 - Products (Page 52) Government Technology - April 2008 - Two Cents (Page 53) Government Technology - April 2008 - Spectrum (Page 54) Government Technology - April 2008 - Spectrum (Page NW1) Government Technology - April 2008 - Spectrum (Page NW2) Government Technology - April 2008 - Spectrum (Page NW3) Government Technology - April 2008 - Spectrum (Page NW4) Government Technology - April 2008 - Personal Computing (Page 55) Government Technology - April 2008 - signal:noise (Page 56) Government Technology - April 2008 - signal:noise (Page 57) Government Technology - April 2008 - signal:noise (Page 58) Government Technology - April 2008 - signal:noise (Page 59) Government Technology - April 2008 - signal:noise (Page 60)
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