Each year, the Social Security Administration (SSA) receives
millions of employer-submitted earnings reports (Form W-2s) that it is
unable to place in an individual Social Security record. If the Social
Security number (SSN) and name on a W-2 do not match SSA's records, the
W-2 is retained in the Earnings Suspense File (ESF). SSA's ability to
match earnings reports is essential to calculating Social Security
benefits. Because of concerns about the size of the ESF, GAO was asked
to determine (1) how SSA processes workers' earnings reports, (2) the
types of errors in ESF reports and the characteristics of employers
whose reports are in the ESF, (3) how often earnings from repeatedly
used SSNs have been reinstated and who receives the earnings from
theses reports, and (4) what key factors contribute to ESF postings.
Upon receiving over 250 million earnings reports annually from employers,
SSA uses various processes to post such reports to workers' Social
Security records. For reports in which worker names and SSNs exactly
match SSA's information, the earnings are credited to the appropriate
Social Security record. When SSA encounters earnings reports that do
not match its records, SSA attempts to make a match through various
automated processes. Such processes have allowed SSA to identify valid
records for an average of 15 million reports annually. However, about 4
percent of the reports still remain unmatched and are retained in the
ESF. SSA uses additional automated and manual processes to continue to
identify valid records. The most recent data show that SSA posted
("reinstated") over 2 million earnings reports in the ESF to valid
records from such processes. Earnings reports in the ESF have serious
data problems and are particularly likely to be submitted by certain
categories of employers. Such problems include missing SSNs and
employer use of the same SSN for more than one worker in the same tax
year. Additional problems include missing surnames or names that
include nonalphabetic characters. Forty-three percent of employers
associated with earnings reports in the ESF are from only 5 of the 83
broad industry categories. Among these industry categories, a small
portion of employers account for a disproportionate number of ESF
reports. SSA has reinstated a substantial number of earnings reports
with SSNs that appear repeatedly in the ESF. We analyzed the most
frequently occurring 295 SSNs, which appeared in ESF 1,000 times or
more between tax years 1985 and 2000. Of the earnings reports
associated with these SSNs, SSA reinstated 13.1 million to the records
of about 11.7 million workers. Although most reinstatements were for
U.S.-born workers, in recent years the percentage of reinstatements to
foreign-born workers has markedly increased. Also increasing is the
percentage of foreign-born workers that received reinstatements for
earnings in years prior to receiving a valid SSN--a potential indicator
of unauthorized employment. Three major factors contribute to ESF
postings. Under IRS regulations, employers must ask new hires to
provide their name and SSN, but are not required to independently
corroborate this information with SSA. DHS requires employers to
visually inspect new workers' identity and work authorization
documents, but employers do not have to verify these documents, and
they can be easily counterfeited. Further, IRS regulations are minimal;
IRS has no record of assessing a penalty for filing inaccurate earnings
reports; and DHS enforcement efforts against employers who knowingly
hire unauthorized workers has been limited in recent years because of
shifting priorities following the events of September 11, 2001. Last,
although SSA and DHS offer employers verification free of charge, these
services are voluntary, have some limitations, and remain underutilized.
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