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IRS Budget Cut Penny-Wise But Dollar-Foolish, Warns Baucus

by Leroy Baker, Tax-News.com, New York

24 May 2006

U.S. Senator Max Baucus (D-Mont.), Ranking Member of the Senate Finance Committee, has estimated that a one-percent cut in the 2006 budget of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) will actually cost the U.S. Treasury $1 billion in lost tax collection.

In response to a query from Baucus, IRS Commissioner Mark Everson reported this month that the funding rescinded in last year’s Defense appropriations bill could have provided for the closure of 88,000 additional collection cases and 25,000 additional by-mail audits.

According to Baucus, a 2003 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report indicated that there would be substantial returns on the dollar – from 11 to 13 dollars raised for every dollar spent – for the kinds of enforcement activities that Everson says have been curtailed by budget cuts this year.

“At a time when the IRS is struggling to close the annual $345 billion tax gap, it’s clear that the 2006 across-the-board budget cut is hamstringing their efforts even further,” stated Baucus.

“Commissioner Everson’s estimates confirm that even small reductions in collection and taxpayer services are penny-wise and pound-foolish. Sparing the IRS budget may be the best way to bring in more owed revenue and end deficit spending," he argued.

The IRS currently estimates the direct return on each dollar of its budget at four to one. IRS Research Division estimates in the 2003 GAO report placed returns for activities such as tax enforcement at more than ten – and in some cases more than 20 – dollars collected for every dollar spent.

Phone calls to follow up on tax debts owed were estimated to return 13 dollars for every dollar spent. Audits by mail returned as much as 11 dollars for every dollar spent.

Using the overall rate of a four to one return, Baucus says that this year’s $100 million budget cut translates to a $400 million loss. However, using estimates from the 2003 GAO report, tied directly to tax collection activities, losses from the 2006 cut could reach $1 billion and more, he claimed.

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