Individual income tax return examinations conducted by the US Internal Revenue Service decreased in 2013 for the third year in a row, falling to USD1.4 million or 1 for every 104 tax returns.
Just over 80% were done by correspondence, with only one of every 541 returns being examined in a face-to-face interview. The number of estate return filings more than doubled, although estate return examinations decreased by 14% .
“Budget reductions contributed to a decrease in the number of examinations and an increase in the number of delinquent taxes being assigned to an inactive status at the Internal Revenue Service last year,” said J. Russell George, Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration. “However, overall enforcement revenue increased in 2013, due, in part, to several large appeal case settlements.”
Key findings of TIGTA’s report:
1. The Internal Revenue Service’s appropriated budget decreased 7.4 % between FY2010 and FY2013, from $12.1 billion to $11.2 billion after sequestration.
• The budget cuts resulted in reductions
in the number of employees available to provide services to taxpayers
and enforce the tax laws.
• The number of full-time equivalents
dropped by nearly 9 percent, from 94,618 at the end of FY2010 to 86,310
at the end of FY2013, including a 4 percent reduction between FY2012 and
FY2013. The number of enforcement personnel decreased by more than
1,000 employees during FY2013.
2. Total dollars received and collected (gross collections) increased
for the third straight year to $2.9 trillion (a 13 percent increase) in
FY2013.
• Enforcement revenue collected also
increased from $50.2 billion in FY2012 to $53.3 billion in FY2013, due,
in part, to several large Appeals case settlements.
• Tax return filings continued to increase as did gross accounts receivable, which increased to $400 billion.
3. The FY2013 Collection function activities showed:
• The amount collected on delinquent accounts by both the Automated Collection System and Field Collection decreased.
• The Collection function continued to
receive more delinquent accounts than it closed, although the number of
delinquent accounts in the Collection queue decreased, due in part to
the shelving of millions of accounts that were not resolved.
• Fewer Notices of Federal Tax Lien were
filed, fewer levies were issued, and fewer seizures were made.
Meanwhile, taxpayers’ use of payment options such as offers in
compromise increased.
4. The IRS Examination function conducted 6% fewer examinations in FY2013 than in FY2012.
• The decline in examinations occurred
across all tax return types, including individual, corporation, S
corporation, and partnership.
• Another important measure of audit
productivity is the percentage of audited tax returns that result in
recommended adjustments to the tax return.
• The IRS associates a high percentage of
audited tax returns that result in recommended adjustments with greater
audit productivity, while audits that result in no change are
considered unproductive.
5. Revenue agent examinations of individual tax returns reached a
five-year low in FY2011 (8 percent). Since then, the no-change rate
gradually increased to 10 percent in FY2013.6. Tax compliance officer examinations of individual tax returns continued to remain at either 9 or 10 percent between FY2009 and FY2013.
7. Revenue agent examinations of corporate tax returns increased to 29 percent during FY2013.
8. Revenue agent examinations of partnership returns increased during FY 2013 to 47 percent. The no-change rate increased in FY2010 (44 percent) and FY2011 (48 percent) and decreased in FY2012 to 44 percent.
9. Revenue agent examinations of S corporations continue to decrease from 39 percent in FY2011 to 33 percent in FY2012 and 31 percent in FY2013.
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