The IRS is a government agency. People leave and retire.
If no one ever left and no one ever retired, your math still wouldn't work, but at least it would be worth a little. Instead, it doesn't work at all because we live in reality and agencies and employers lose people all the time for various reasons.
people die
people retire
People leave
People get other jobs
People quit
The IRS, per the last 2 leaders of the agency, have repeatedly said they expect over 50,000 retirements or people leaving the agency in the next 10 years. They have said their workforce is older than most.
The "85,000" positions was an estimate made in 1 report. It was never meant to be a certainly. The IRS has never said there would be that many new hires over the course of a decade. They have said that is unknowable due to the increase funding they are putting toward technology so that don't know how many employees they will need.
There was NEVER a possibility they were going to go out and hire 85,000 people all of a sudden, regardless of what your favorite talk show hosts, podcast hosts, or politician said. The IRS never said they would do that. The leaders of the agency never said they would do that. People made it up.
Your opinion is based on nothing but your imagination.
The majority of IRS hires would fill positions of people leaving the agency over the next decade. That includes staff across departments, not just auditors.
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