Pursuant to a legislative requirement, GAO provided information on the
results of the Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) financial statements and
on the effectiveness of its internal controls for fiscal year (FY)
ending September 30, 1999.
GAO noted that: (1) GAO found weaknesses in IRS' accounting procedures
for certain assets purchased in one year but used for a multi year
period; (2) IRS corrected this problem for its FY 1999 balance sheet;
(3) IRS does not consistently follow procedures for reimbursements that
it expects to receive when it provides goods and services to other
federal agencies, state and foreign governments, and private
organizations; (4) based on a statistical sample of September 30, 1999,
reimbursement receivables, GAO determined that the gross amount of
reimbursable receivables was not fairly stated, although due to the
allowance for bad debts accounts, GAO did not take exception to the net
amount; (5) some problems were also noted with respect to IRS' use of
its allowance for bad debts account; (6) GAO found that existing review
procedures at IRS' national office were inadequate to prevent errors in
transactions posted to the general ledger and in financial information
reported to Treasury; (7) the self-assessments IRS performs under the
Federal Managers' Financial Integrity Act (FMFIA) can be a better tool
for disclosing and correcting its internal weaknesses; (8) GAO found
that IRS' FY 1999 FMFIA process ended too early to provide reasonable
assurance that all material weaknesses that existed during the reporting
year were adequately disclosed; (9) specifically, although IRS did not
submit its FY 1999 FMFIA assurance statement to Treasury until February
2000, IRS concluded its internal self-assessment process for FY 1999 on
September 30, 1999; (10) IRS officials informed GAO that any material
weaknesses that came to their attention during this intervening period
would be considered in the succeeding reporting period, rather than FY
1999; and (11) as a result, to the extent material weaknesses that
existed in FY 1999 were identified during this period, IRS' FY 1999
FMFIA assurance statement would ordinarily exclude them and potentially
present an incomplete list of material weaknesses and a misleading
assessment of the effectiveness of IRS' internal controls in meeting the
objectives of FMFIA.
Click here for the full GAO Report, PDF Version, 12pgs. 191K