The Internal Revenue Service is trying to leverage the extra billions in funding from last year’s Inflation Reduction Act to narrow the ever-increasing gap between taxes due and taxes collected, but has spent surprisingly little of the money so far.
The IRS released tax gap projections last week indicating the projected gross tax gap ballooned to $688 billion in tax year 2021, a major jump from prior estimates (see story). The new estimate includes an increase of more than $192 billion from previous estimates for tax years 2014-16 and an extra $138 billion from the revised projections for tax years 2017-19. The tax gap is a measure of the level of overall noncompliance, and the gross tax gap is the amount of true tax liability that is not paid voluntarily in a timely way, basically representing the gap between taxes owed and taxes collected.
However, the charts shown in the report issued last week by the IRS do point to some inconsistencies.
“It’s based on research that’s seven years old,” said Mark Everson, a former IRS commissioner who is now a vice chairman at alliant, a tax consulting firm. “These gross numbers are just arithmetically projected based on changes in the economy. Of course, the economy has grown, so the gross tax gap is larger. As you look across the table that shows what’s happened over the years and focus on the voluntary compliance rate, what’s remarkable is that has stayed stable.”
The data shows that uncollected taxes from FICA, the payroll tax from the Federal Insurance Contributions Act, total $36 billion, and from FUTA, the Federal Unemployment Tax Act, amount to $1 billion.
“That’s based on studies that go all the way back to 2008 to 2010,” said Everson. “There’s a lot of work that needs to be done to establish just what really is the voluntary compliance rate. Right now, it doesn’t show any deterioration because they’re using the same resources they used years ago.”
Nevertheless, the IRS has insisted that the projections have been updated and plans to update the projections on an annual basis. The agency hopes to use the funding it received from the Inflation Reduction Act to refocus more of its audit efforts on high-income taxpayers and large corporations and partnerships, with the help of technology like artificial intelligence and data analytics (see story). However, it has received pushback from Republicans in Congress who have warned about an army of IRS agents being hired to pursue taxpayers and have sought to claw back the enforcement funding.