Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO discussed the results of its
fiscal year (FY) 1999 financial statement audit of the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS).
GAO noted that: (1) while IRS has made progress in addressing some of
the issues from GAO's audit of its FY 1998 financial statements, the
results of GAO's FY 1999 financial audit revealed that IRS continues to
experience pervasive material weaknesses in the design and operation of
its automated financial management and related operational systems,
accounting procedures, documentation, recordkeeping, and internal
controls, including computer security controls; (2) specifically, the
major issues identified in GAO's FY 1999 audit includes the following:
(a) deficiencies in controls to properly manage unpaid assessments,
resulting in both taxpayer burden and potentially billions of dollars in
lost revenue to the government; (b) deficiencies in controls over tax
refunds, permitting the disbursement of potentially billions of dollars
of improper refunds; (c) vulnerabilities in controls over hardcopy tax
receipts and taxpayer data that increase the government's and taxpayers'
risk of loss or inappropriate disclosure of taxpayer data; (d)
vulnerabilities in computer security that may allow unauthorized
individuals to access, alter, or abuse proprietary IRS programs and
electronic data and taxpayer information; (e) the failure to reconcile
IRS' fund balance with Treasury records throughout FY 1999, resulting in
IRS' inability to routinely ensure accountability and proper use of its
funds; (f) inadequate systems and controls that resulted in the
inability to properly account for IRS' property and equipment and
related costs; (g) inadequate budgetary controls, resulting in IRS'
inability to assure that its budgetary resources are being properly
accounted for, reported, and controlled; and (h) an inadequate financial
reporting process that continued to result in IRS' inability to reliably
prepare several of the required financial statements and financial
management systems that do not comply with the requirements of the
Federal Financial Management and Improvement Act of 1996; (3) many of
the problems facing IRS represent serious agencywide financial
management and operational challenges that will require a substantial
and continuous commitment of resources, time, and expertise to correct;
(4) IRS has major efforts under way to modernize both its organizational
structure and its information systems; and (5) these efforts appear to
be heading IRS in the right direction, but, as IRS itself has stated,
successful modernization of its information systems will take years to
fully achieve.
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