I agree. I know people being paid by 1099 who shouldn't be and I know people being paid by 1099 who are correctly classified. In fact, I've been paid by 1099 myself (legitimately by even the most stringent standard). I was just objecting to the flat statement that employees being paid by 1099 instead of W2 were committing fraud.
I understand and accept that. That simply isn't what I said. You may have skimmed the posts and therefore misinterpreted what I said, but that is NOT what I said.
Also, the problem is much bigger than you realize. In my practice I am able to get less than 5% of the people who are misclassified, to actually fill out the paperwork for the IRS to fix the problem for them and for future employees of that particular company. On top of that no matter how much lecturing/cajoling/flat out yelling at my business customers, I do, I cannot get many of them to classify people correctly, because they don't want to be responsible for employer social security and medicare taxes, UC taxes, workers compensation insurance etc.
Everybody is feeling the "pinch" these days and a too great of percentage of those feeling the pinch are either too scared to demand to be treated properly, or too greedy/trying to reduce expenses to care if they obey the law or not. Quite a few of them were doing it wrong even before the "pinch".
So, their employees get hurt on the job, have no medical insurance and no workers comp, and get laid off because they cannot do the work anymore...and if they sue their employer they often fail, or they get a bad reference, and have trouble getting work from anyone else if they get better.
Or you get the people who made a whopping 25k on a 1099, who were legally employees, and suddenly find themselves with a 5k tax bill at tax time, because they had no idea what it meant to be paid that way...and no means to pay it, because they barely survived the year on that 25k.
Or you get the people who see that first balance due...freak out...don't file...bury their heads in the sand and 5-10 years later find themselves owing the IRS 100k with absolutely no hope of ever being able to dig themselves back out of that hole...with their whole life levied and garnished.
It is NOT pretty...and the "employees" get hurt bad. Very rarely does it ever involve someone who is making serious money and can afford to pay their taxes, who really should have been classified as an employee. Mostly its near poverty level "employees" who are so desperate for work that they take whatever they can get and suffer the consequences later.
I think that the one that ticked me off the most was the 60 year old man working at a bread factory, on an assembly line, making 12k a year, who got a 1099...and he wouldn't fill out the paperwork that would have given him some relief, because he was too scared to lose that job.
Think about it...think outside the box of your socioeconomic background.