Significant weaknesses exist in the systems that the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) uses to manage, spend, account for, and report on its
operating funds; GAO was unable to audit $4.3 billion of the $6.7
billion in operating funds that IRS reported spending in fiscal year
1992 because IRS could not account for all the money. Significant
control weaknesses included the following: (1) managers lacked current,
reliable information on available budget authority, (2) some types of
expenditures were recorded only after lengthy delays, and (3) reports
used to monitor compliance with laws governing the use of budget
authority contained unauthorized adjustments. In addition, IRS reports
misclassified expenditures. Further, IRS did not periodically review and
adjust its records to reflect changes in obligations and remove canceled
appropriation or resolve billions of dollars in discrepancies between
its records and those of the Treasury Department. Also, IRS could not
ensure that outlays for goods and services were proper because of
fundamental control weaknesses in its payment processes, including a
lack of proper review and approval of payments.
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