Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the collection of
diesel fuel excise taxes, focusing on: (1) changes in diesel fuel tax
collections in 1994; (2) concerns about Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
changes to diesel fuel taxation requirements; and (3) fraudulent claims
involving excise tax refunds.
GAO found that: (1) IRS determined that diesel excise tax collections
increased about $1.2 billion from 1993 to 1994; (2) this increase did
not include amounts collected as a result of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act 1993 fuel tax rate increase; (3) increased tax
compliance accounted for between $600 million and $700 million of the
increase; (4) IRS has addressed the two major concerns regarding the
Environmental Protection Agency's dyeing requirements, but has not
addressed concerns about the concentration of dye required and the
impact of the requirements on fuel availability at marinas; (5) IRS has
not addressed concerns about tax collection on products added to diesel
fuel after leaving the terminal; and (6) the new diesel fuel taxation
approach remains vulnerable to fraudulent excise tax refund claims, but
IRS has not determined the extent of such fraud.
Click here for the full GAO Report, PDF Version, 23pgs. 159K