Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO provided information on: (1)
the number and characteristics of self-employed taxpayers who receive
social security credit for self-employment earnings when they are
delinquent in paying the self-employment taxes on those earnings; (2)
why self-employed taxpayers who have not paid their self-employment
taxes are allowed to receive social security credit; and (3) any
potential actions that could enhance the collection of self-employment
taxes.
GAO noted that: (1) analysis of Internal Revenue Service's (IRS)
accounts receivable data showed that more than 1.9 million self-employed
taxpayers were delinquent in paying $6.9 billion in self-employment
taxes on 3.6 million returns; (2) these taxpayers can be generally
characterized by their low income and multiple delinquencies; (3) over
70 percent of their returns reported net self-employment income of less
than +$20,000, and over half of the taxpayers owed delinquent taxes for
more than one tax year; (4) more than 144,000 taxpayers with delinquent
self-employment taxes of $487 million were receiving about $105 million
in monthly social security benefits; (5) the income on which the
self-employment taxes had not been paid resulted in at least an
estimated $2.5 million in monthly benefits that would not have been paid
if those earnings had not been included in the benefit computation; (6)
self-employed taxpayers can get social security benefits based on
earnings for which they did not pay taxes because the Social Security
Act requires the Social Security Administration (SSA) to grant earnings
credits, which are used to determine benefit eligibility and amounts,
and pay benefits without regard to whether the social security taxes
have been paid; (7) not all self-employed taxpayers can receive credit
for their earnings; (8) under the Social Security Act, when taxpayers do
not file their tax returns within 3 years, 3 months, and 15 days after
the end of the year in which the income was earned, they are not to
receive social security credit; (9) of the 3.6 million returns with
delinquent self-employment tax, SSA did not post earnings to its records
for 473,755 returns; (10) for an estimated 81.9 percent of the returns
with unposted earnings, taxpayers filed the returns after the statutory
time limit; (11) IRS has recently been given the option to continuously
levy taxpayers' social security benefits and other federal payments to
recover delinquent taxes and is in the process of developing a program
to do so; (12) this levy program would affect taxpayers that are already
delinquent in paying their taxes and should reduce their tax debt; (13)
another way to collect taxes before taxpayers become delinquent would be
to encourage more self-employed individuals to make their required
estimated tax payments; and (14) GAO estimated that most self-employed
delinquent taxpayers did not make required estimated tax payments, and
many were assessed an estimated tax penalty.
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