GAO reviewed the condition of the Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) audit
workpapers, including the documentation of supervisory review.
GAO noted that: (1) during its review of IRS' financial status audits,
the workpapers did not always meet the requirements under IRS' workpaper
standards; (2) standards not met in some audit workpapers included the
expectation that: (a) the amount of tax adjustments recorded in the
workpapers would be the same as the adjustment amounts shown in the
auditor's workpaper summary and on the report sent to the taxpayer; and
(b) the workpaper files would contain all required documents to support
conclusions about tax liability that an auditor reached and reported to
the taxpayer; (3) these shortcomings with the workpapers are not new;
(4) GAO found documentation on supervisory review of workpapers prepared
during the audits in an estimated 6 percent of the audits in GAO's
sample; (5) in the remaining audits, GAO found no documentation that the
group managers reviewed either the support for the tax adjustments or
the report communicating such adjustments to the taxpayer; (6) IRS
officials indicated that all audits in which the taxpayer does not agree
with the recommended adjustments are to be reviewed by the group
managers; (7) if done, this review would occur after the report on audit
results was sent to the taxpayer; (8) even when GAO counts all such
unagreed audits, those with documentation of supervisory review would be
an estimated 26 percent of the audits in GAO's sample population; (9)
GAO believes that supervisory reviews and documentation of such reviews
are important because they are IRS' primary quality control process;
(10) proper reviews done during the audit can help ensure that audits
minimize burden on taxpayers and that any adjustments to taxpayers'
liabilities are supported; (11) although Examination Division officials
recognized the need for proper reviews, they said IRS group managers
cannot review workpapers for all audits because of competing priorities;
(12) these officials also said that group managers get involved in the
audit process in ways that may not be documented in the workpapers; (13)
they stated that these group managers monitor auditors' activities
through other processes, such as by reviewing the time that auditors
spent on an audit, conducting on-the-job visits, and talking to auditors
about their cases and audit inventory; and (14) in these processes,
however, the officials said that group managers usually were not
reviewing workpapers or validating the calculations used to recommend
adjustments before sending the audit results to the taxpayer.
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