GAO discussed the rights of taxpayers and their treatment during audits
of their tax returns by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
GAO noted that: (1) IRS has limited data on both the treatment of
taxpayers and the burdens imposed on them during audits; (2) IRS
recently created a system to track taxpayers' complaints about improper
treatment but IRS does not solicit input on all improper treatment; (3)
similarly, IRS has no comprehensive definition of, and little data on,
the burden its audits impose on taxpayers; (4) IRS has recently
developed a survey that will ask individual taxpayers about their
satisfaction with various parts of the audit process but results will
not be available until 1998; (5) IRS has various indicators and
standards on audit performance; (6) one measure of audit performance is
how much additional tax is recommended; (7) IRS does not have a
corresponding measure on how much of the recommended tax is ultimately
collected after taxpayer appeals; (8) without an indicator to balance
taxes recommended against those collected, IRS auditors could have an
incentive to recommend taxes that would be unlikely to withstand a
taxpayer challenge; (9) IRS has nine audit standards; (10) GAO's work on
one set of IRS audit techniques--those used in analyzing taxpayers'
financial status to identify unreported income--showed that IRS used
these techniques in less than a quarter of the audits completed in the
time periods covered by GAO's review; (11) in about one-quarter of the
audits in which financial status techniques were used, IRS did not have
to contact the taxpayer to obtain information on the taxpayer's
financial status beyond what was reported on the tax return; (12) GAO
also found that IRS' use of financial status techniques has not
increased in recent years; (13) regarding revenue impact, GAO found that
in about 16 percent of the cases where they were used, these techniques
did help to identify significant amounts of unreported income--$10,000
or more; (14) IRS is concerned that its ability to target the
potentially most noncompliant taxpayers for audits is deteriorating;
(15) IRS' concern arises because it has not been able to rely on its
past approach for developing statistically valid research data that
allowed IRS to create and periodically update formulas to target the
returns with the most potential for noncompliance; (16) IRS last
collected these data through audits of a random sample of taxpayers for
tax year 1988; and (17) IRS subsequently abandoned that approach due to
concerns about its costs and to concerns from the public and Congress
about the taxpayer burden involved with those audits.
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