Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the Internal Revenue
Service's (IRS) 1994 Earned Income Credit (EIC) compliance study,
focusing on: (1) evaluating IRS' study methodology to determine if the
reported results were reasonably accurate; (2) identifying the primary
sources of EIC noncompliance found in the study; and (3) determining
whether recent IRS compliance efforts are designed to address the
primary sources of noncompliance.
GAO noted that: (1) IRS' estimate of $4.4 billion in EIC overclaims has
a 95-percent confidence interval of $4.0 billion to $4.9 billion; (2)
GAO's evaluation of the study methodology showed that the estimate is
reasonably accurate and representative of EIC claimants filing between
January 15 and April 21, 1995; (3) some aspects of the study methodology
affected the precision of the results; but, given the scale of the
findings, these limitations do not affect the study's message or its
usefulness in designing compliance approaches; (4) although it is a
reasonable estimate of EIC overclaims, the entire $4.4 billion should
not be viewed as a potential savings to the government had IRS somehow
been able to prevent or correct all of these errors; (5) for returns
filed with an EIC claim, the tax year 1994 study was designed to
evaluate taxpayers' compliance with each EIC eligibility filing
requirement, to produce an overall estimate of EIC amounts claimed in
error, and to identify the sources of these errors; (6) the study was
not designed to detect or quantify EIC claims that taxpayers could have
made; (7) the largest source of taxpayer error identified by the tax
year 1994 study relates to EIC requirements that are difficult for IRS
to verify--those related to qualifying children; (8) unlike income
transfer programs, the EIC was designed to be administered through the
tax system; (9) this choice generally should result in lower
administrative costs and higher participation rates and emphasizes that
the credit is for working taxpayers; (10) EIC eligibility is difficult
for IRS to verify through its traditional enforcement procedures; (11)
thoroughly verifying qualifying child eligibility requires IRS to do an
audit of the type done in the EIC compliance studies; (12) with new
enforcement tools provided by Congress and an increase in funding
designated for EIC-related activities, IRS began implementing in fiscal
year 1998 a plan that, over a period of 5 years, calls for attacking EIC
noncompliance; (13) most of the efforts that make up the EIC compliance
initiative had not progressed far enough at the time GAO completed its
audit for it to make any judgment about their effectiveness; (14) IRS
plans to measure the overall impact of the compliance initiative on the
overclaim rate through annual studies of EIC compliance starting with a
baseline study of tax year 1997 returns; and (15) IRS plans to measure
the results of the individual initiative components implemented in 1998.
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