Understanding how the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) will affect the Internal Revenue Service’s operations requires wading through a swamp of misinformation, disinformation, and no information.
But to cut through much of the political muck, here are the facts we know and some key questions about how the IRS will spend the substantial new funding provided by the new law.
About the big picture. Here’s what we know for certain: The law provides about $80 billion in new IRS funding over the next decade. Congress wants $46 billion to be used for enforcement, $3 billion to improve taxpayer services, and the rest for improving the agency’s infrastructure, including its rickety technology.
But Congress did not tell the IRS exactly how to spend that money. After critics circulated scary stories about what the IRS would do with $80 billion, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen instructed the agency to develop a detailed plan—within six months.
About those audits. From the moment the Biden Administration announced its proposal to boost the IRS’s budget, it’s been consistent on one point. Some of the new money will be used to increase enforcement against the very wealthy and big businesses.
This is as it should be: The audit rate of people with an annual income of at least $1 million fell from 8.4% in 2010 to 2.4% in 2019. Once, nearly all the country’s largest corporations were audited. Now only about half are.
Treasury insists audit rates would not increase relative to recent levels for taxpayers with income below $400,000. Four of those words—relative to recent years—opened the door for critics to warn the IRS would use the new money to go after middle-income households.
Treasury could clarify this by defining what it means by recent audit levels. But it hasn’t. In 2019, just 0.4% of all individual returns—about 700,000—were audited. Is the goal to restore the 2010 audit rate of 1.1%? Or 2015’s rate of 0.8%? And how would those audits be conducted—in a meeting between the taxpayer and an IRS auditor to go over each line in the return or through correspondence and focused on just a few items? Currently about 80% of individual audits are done by mail.
Maybe the better question is what is the optimal audit rate and method, given the new resources?
Next question: Does the IRS plan to use less burdensome tools in its enforcement arsenal, short of audits?
For example, the agency currently matches Forms W-2 and 1099 to individual income tax returns. If it finds a discrepancy above a threshold dollar amount, it will notify the tax filer.
In 2018, the IRS received 2.8 billion information returns and detected 22.3 million discrepancies. But it could afford to select just 2.9 million of the mismatches for further review. That’s about half the rate of a decade ago. Should that historic rate be restored?
About those 87,000 armed agents. In May 2021, the Biden Administration projected the IRS would hire 86,852 new employees over the next decade if Congress approved the $80 billion. But it never provided a detailed breakdown of what types of positions would be filled.
Republicans filled the information vacuum with the specter of 87,000 armed IRS agents terrorizing innocent people.
That’s ludicrous. Less than 3% of IRS employees are authorized to carry weapons. They are agents of its Criminal Investigations unit whose targets typically are drug dealers, money launderers, and others suspected of serious, often-violent, crimes. The IRS is currently hiring about 300 more.
And the critics willfully ignored some breadcrumbs in those 2021 Administration estimates: Some of those new hires would work in taxpayer services or technology. More recently, Administration officials have asserted that 50,000 of the new hires would replace retirees.
Still unanswered: Will the new hires do the same work as the people they are replacing, or will the IRS create new positions more suitable for the 21st century? The answer has implications for the type of agency the IRS will be in the future.
About hiring. Senator Rick Scott (R-FL) warns people not to take jobs with the IRS. If Republicans take Congress in January, he says, the $80 billion will be history and those new hires will lose their jobs. Well, that’s not true. Biden still would hold the veto pen, and civil service rules make it hard to fire government workers.
But it already is tough for the IRS to hire in today’s competitive market. At the last minute, Congress dropped from the IRA provisions that would have made it easier for the IRS to recruit. But Congress can restore that language in future spending bills, and the Office of Personnel Management has discretionary authority to do the same.
About the consequences. Disinformation, misinformation, and no information have consequences. The scariest has been increasing threats against IRS employees, causing the agency to review its security procedures for the first time since the 1995 bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City.
And that raises the biggest question of all: Who will take a job at the IRS with a target on their back?
I co-authored this column with my Tax Policy Center colleague Janet Holtzblatt.