Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the Internal Revenue
Service's (IRS) Installment Agreement Program, focusing on the: (1)
increase in installment agreements since IRS streamlined the processing
and approval of taxpayers' requests for installment agreements; (2)
effects these changes had on IRS collection activities; (3) internal
auditors' concerns regarding these changes; (4) information that IRS
provides taxpayers on their liabilities under installment agreements;
and (5) administrative practices that could improve the installment
agreement program.
GAO found that: (1) the 2.6-million new installment agreements approved
in fiscal year (FY) 1994 represented a 136-percent increase over the
number of FY 1991 installment agreements; (2) the amount of taxes paid
through new installment agreements increased 135 percent between FY 1991
and 1994 and accounted for 33 percent of the delinquent taxes paid in FY
1994; (3) installment agreement program changes have affected IRS
collection activities by reducing Automated Collection System
collections and the routine collection process' workload; (4) internal
IRS auditors have raised concerns about the ease of entering into
installment agreements and IRS failure to instruct taxpayers to amend
their withholding or estimated taxes to prevent future delinquencies;
(5) IRS may be permitting financially capable taxpayers to avoid paying
their tax debts in one on-time payment and to accumulate tax debts by
adding new tax balances to existing agreements; (6) IRS is taking steps
to reduce the problems the auditors identified; and (7) administrative
changes to improve the installment agreement program and reduce costs
include informing taxpayers of the applicable penalties and interest
that will be added to their installment agreements, allowing taxpayers
to make electronic direct debit payments, and sending some default
notices by regular mail instead of certified mail.
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