The IRS was originally set to receive $80 billion over 10 years from the Inflation Reduction Act, but approximately $1.4 billion was later rescinded last December as part of an agreement between Congress and the Biden administration to raise the debt limit and avert a default on the national debt.
Nevertheless, relatively little of the IRA funding has been spent to date, according to a report released last week by the Treasury Inspector for Tax Administration, which found that as of June 30, 2023, the IRS had expended approximately $1.95 billion, or 2.5%, of its $78 billion in IRA funding.
“The majority of the expenditures during this time period related to IRS employees’ pay and benefits and contractors’ support for advisory and assistance services,” said the report.
The IRS also received funding last December under the regular appropriations process. The Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2023 provided annual appropriated funding of $12.3 billion for three of the four IRS primary budget activities, including $5.4 billion for enforcement. However, according to IRS management, during fiscal year 2023, the service transferred approximately $272 million of enforcement appropriation funds to other areas, including $100 million to taxpayer services, $122 million to operations support, and $50 million to business systems modernization. Congress had provided no appropriated funding for the Business Systems Modernization Program, which normally funds upgrades to IRS information technology systems, but it did provide special funding transfer authority and direct hire authority to address the backlog of returns and correspondence.
A separate report released last week by TIGTA discussed the major management and performance challenges facing the IRS in fiscal year 2024. Those include managing its transformation efforts for the IRA. One of the challenges, the report pointed out, is what will happen if Congress continues to reduce the IRS’s funding, as it did last December when it clawed back $1.4 billion in funding for enforcement from the Inflation Reduction Act.
“If the IRS continues to receive reductions to its funding over the next decade, it will have to make difficult decisions on what to prioritize when making improvements to its operations and the way in which it serves taxpayers,” said the report. “The IRS has historically struggled to fulfill long-term plans to transform the organization. While some of this can be attributed to the continually changing budget environment, the IRS has also not effectively managed the process.”
The agency will need to use the funding from the IRA not only to expand its enforcement efforts, but also to improve taxpayer service and modernize its aging technology.
“The implementation of the IRA will challenge the IRS to ensure the proper balance of improving services to taxpayers, expanding enforcement, and modernizing its information technology. In addition, the IRS will need to ensure that it uses this increased funding in the most effective manner,” said the report.
The TIGTA report summarizes the findings of a number of earlier reports by the inspector general and may point the way for IRS Commissioner Daniel Werfel to leverage the funding to improve the agency.