Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the status of the
Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) continuous levy program, focusing on:
(1) the number of taxpayers that could be subject to a continuous levy,
the revenue that might be generated, and the cost to IRS to have the
Financial Management Service (FMS) levy the federal payments of those
taxpayers; (2) issues that could delay program implementation or
otherwise affect revenues from the program; (3) the controls and testing
that IRS and FMS have planned to prevent levying taxpayers not subject
to levy and to prevent levying payments for more than the taxpayer owes;
and (4) changes, if any, IRS and FMS could make to yield increased
revenues from the program.
GAO noted that: (1) analysis of IRS' accounts receivable data as of
February 1999 and FMS payment records showed that over 264,000 taxpayers
with delinquent tax liabilities of $2.8 billion received federal
payments totalling $2.1 billion that could have been subject to a
continuous levy if the levy program had been in place at that time; (2)
GAO estimates that IRS could have generated nearly $500 million in
annual revenues from these levies at a cost of about $35 million
annually; (3) only federal retirement and vendor payments, which would
account for about 27 percent of the nearly $500 million in revenue that
could be generated annually, are expected to be available for continuous
levy in July 2000; (4) GAO was not able to determine when Social
Security benefits and federal salaries will be available for levy
because a specific date for including these types of payments in the
program has yet to be set; (5) also, before participating in the levy
program, the Social Security Administration (SSA) wants to know the
names of all Social Security beneficiaries who are to receive an intent
to levy notice from IRS, which is to be sent before any payments are
actually levied; (6) according to IRS, unless SSA can explain how such
information will be used for a tax administration purpose, the Internal
Revenue Code prohibits disclosing such information to SSA before
payments are levied; (7) according to IRS and FMS officials, both
agencies plan to adopt specific controls for the continuous levy program
to prevent inappropriate levies; (8) however, IRS has not planned any
new procedures to ensure that taxpayers receive timely refunds in any
instances in which these controls fail; (9) only 155 federal payments
are likely to be levied during the first phase of program
implementation, which may not result in enough taxpayer contacts to
determine if controls are adequate to prevent inappropriate levies; (10)
several changes to the continuous levy program could yield millions of
dollars in additional tax revenue; and (11) also, GAO estimated that
$77.7 million annually in additional revenue could be generated if: (a)
federal payments made to both spouses determined by IRS to be liable for
joint tax delinquencies; and (b) payments received by an individual
under a Social Security number for tax delinquencies incurred by the
same individual under an employer identification number, or vice versa,
could be continuously levied through this program.
Click here for the full GAO Report, PDF Version, 52pgs. 462K