In the past, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has experienced
declines in enforcement productivity as measured by cases closed per
Full Time Equivalent. Increasing enforcement productivity through a
variety of enforcement improvement projects is one strategy being
pursued by IRS. Evaluating the benefits of different projects requires
good measures of productivity. In addition, IRS's ability to correctly
measure its productivity has important budget implications. GAO was
asked to illustrate available methods to better measure productivity at
IRS. Specifically, our objectives were to (1) describe challenges that
IRS faces when measuring productivity, (2) describe alternative methods
that IRS can use to improve its productivity measures, and (3) assess
the feasibility of using these alternative methods by illustrating
their use with existing IRS data.
Measuring IRS's productivity, the efficiency with which inputs are used to produce
outputs, is challenging. IRS's output could be measured in terms of
impact on taxpayers or the activities it performs. IRS's impacts on
taxpayers, such as compliance and perceptions of fairness, are
intangible and costly to measure. IRS's activities, such as exams or
audits conducted, are easier to count but must be adjusted for
complexity and quality. An increase in exams closed per employee would
not indicate an increase in productivity if IRS had shifted to less
complex exams or if quality declined. IRS can improve its productivity
measures by using a variety of methods for calculating productivity
that adjust for complexity and quality. These methods range from ratios
using a single output and input to methods that combine multiple
outputs and inputs into composite indexes. Which method is appropriate
depends on the purpose for which the productivity measure is being
calculated. For example, a single ratio may be useful for examining the
productivity of a single simple activity, while composite indexes can
be used to measure the productivity of resources across an entire
organization, where many different activities are being performed. Two
examples show that existing data, even though they have limitations,
can be used to produce a more complete picture of productivity. For
individual exams, composite indexes controlling for exam complexity
show a larger productivity decline than the single ratio method. On the
other hand, for exams performed in the Large and Mid-Size Business
(LSMB) division, the single ratio understates the productivity increase
shown, after again controlling for complexity. By using alternative
methods for measuring productivity, managers would be better able to
isolate sources of productivity change and manage resources more
effectively. More complete productivity measures would provide better
information about IRS effectiveness, budget needs, and efforts to
improve efficiency.
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