"well, who can't afford a 5% haircut anyway?"
This justification can be used universally when applying taxes. It's not just poker pros impacted by this.
Maybe it is true that 99.8% of gamblers in general never meet the criteria to be scrutinized by the IRS, but if more and more people get driven to essentially commit tax fraud, don't you think that has an overall net negative to the gambling industry in general which cascades outward from the core of the industry to secondary and tertiary economic impacts. Places that rely heavily on electronic trails and evidence. KYC laws...etc. Remember, this also effects other forms of gambling and not poker exclusively.
I get it. Tax fraud is an option. Not gambling is one option. Gambling elsewhere is another option. There are options.
You might feel like you can determine when other people can and cannot float a 5% loss in income, but I wouldn't presume as much and I don't think any government should be introducing a new tax without justifiable reasoning. That's all.
Once again, you’re missing the basic math. Let’s break it down with the most generous interpretation.
1) Very few are winning, or winning anything reportable, so they are already not paying taxes. Knock off at least 90% off the pool of impacted players.
2) Even fewer are paying taxes, either because they know it’s not going to be noticed, or don’t care, or don’t even realize they should, or play in home/private games where no one is getting a tax form. Knock off 95% of the remaining 10%.
3) Of that remaining 0.5%, most are big enough winners that they aren’t really going to feel the difference enough to quit poker, as apocalyptically claimed by some. Or they are staked, so it’s largely not their own money. Or they have a clever accountant who figures out an SCorp workaround. Or it is a trivial expense to them.
4) So now we’re down to maybe 1/10th of 1%. These are the small winners caught in the weird and yes stupid gap created by the law where the change from 100% to 90% deductibility starts to look meaningful in the abstract, but per Galfond is going to be typically more like a 4% hit on their net—for that one year. (If they are big winners or losers the next year, it becomes a non-issue.)
5) Of that 1/10th of 1%, the ones who will see a major difference in terms of real dollars (again per Galfond and other experts) are the ultra-high volume low ROI grinders at the top stakes in tourneys like Triton. The number of players who fit this description are surpassingly small. We may now be down to 1/100th of 1% of all players—if they are American. Many are not. Maybe not even 1/1000th of 1%.
You want to cry for 1 in 100,000 players? Spend your energy there? OK.
But don’t tell me poker is going to die because of it. Many are just stampeding along with the others in a social media panic.
What we’re seeing here is the equivalent of workers who make minimum wage getting outraged on behalf of billionaires when the wealthy might pay a little more. A most American phenomenon, which looks bonkers to the rest of the world.
Poker rooms quietly change their rake structures and promotion drops all the time. These changes often impact players’ bottom line far more than 4%, in games where very few are already longtime winners. Do I like it? No. I avoid casino play except for big tournaments for that and other reasons, such as the atmosphere and food sucking.
Yet poker keeps going.
I’d also like to see the rule axed. It’s arbitrary and sillly. But it is hardly the biggest problem in poker, let alone our country.