Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the Internal Revenue
Service's (IRS) use of random audits during fiscal years 1994 through
1996, focusing on the: (1) number of audits selected overall and at
random for tax returns filed by all taxpayers and by IRS employees
across the nation and in Georgia; (2) profile of the taxpayers subjected
to random audits by state, type of taxpayer return, taxpayer income
level, and taxpayer occupation; (3) results of the random audits in
terms of the number of audits for which additional taxes were
recommended as well as the amount of these additional taxes and the
number of referrals to IRS' Criminal Investigation Division; (4) known
burdens imposed on taxpayers subjected to random audits; and (5)
alternatives that IRS might have used other than random selection to
meet its objectives.
GAO noted that: (1) between the fiscal years 1994 and 1996, the number
of audits nationwide increased from 1.4 million to 2.1 million; (2) the
increases were due to audits of taxpayers claiming the earned income
credit (EIC); (3) during fiscal years 1994 through 1996, the IRS did not
randomly select returns for audit from either the population of all
taxpayers or all returns; (4) IRS has about 40 audit sources, which are
programs and techniques used to select potentially noncompliant returns
for audit; (5) IRS audit sources do not rely on random selection from
the population of all returns but rather IRS selects returns having
characteristics indicative of potential noncompliance; (6) IRS did
identify six projects involving subpopulations of taxpayers with
indications of noncompliance from which taxpayers were randomly selected
for audit; (7) IRS chose six subpopulations for the six projects
nonrandomly on the basis of known or suspected high noncompliance rates
and other criteria, including geographic location or business size; (8)
the number of audits generated by random selection for these six
projects was small compared with the million or more audits done each
year; (9) IRS does not randomly audit its 100,000-plus employees; (10)
IRS treats its employees the same as other taxpayers for the purposes of
audit selection, with one exception: IRS has a special program for
auditing returns filed by specific types of employees; (11) this special
program has not used random selection; (12) although the IRS data show
the projects covered taxpayers in almost all states, 16 states had fewer
than 10 random audits, and 10 states had more than 100 such audits;
these 10 states, generally, had a higher number of audits because an IRS
field office for those states ran 1 of the 6 projects; (13) most audited
individuals in the six projects reported positive income below $25,000;
(14) audit results for the two projects with more than 200 audited
returns showed that the percentage of audits recommending additional
taxes was 46 percent for the EIC project and 80 percent for the eating
and drinking establishment project; (15) according to IRS, any audit
imposes some level of costs and burden on taxpayers; (16) IRS had no
alternative data sources that would accomplish the objectives of the six
projects other than random audits; and (17) IRS officials said they have
little incentive to randomly select taxpayers for audits because IRS'
regular audit programs generally find more noncompliance at lower costs.
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