U.S. IRS 'under siege', Yellen says, needs $80 billion to beef up tax
work
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[June 08, 2022]
By Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Treasury
Secretary Janet Yellen on Tuesday urged Congress to approve $80 billion
in funding for the Internal Revenue Service to help the agency reduce a
huge backlog of tax returns and allow it to go after $600 billion in
unpaid tax bills.
"The IRS is under siege. It is suffering from huge underinvestment,"
Yellen told a Senate Finance Committee hearing on Treasury's budget
request for fiscal 2023.
Yellen said the agency was dealing with massive problems, including a
"huge backlog" in working through tax returns, and lacked the personnel
needed to carry out complicated audits of higher-earning taxpayers.
As of May 27, the IRS had 10.2 million unprocessed individual returns,
including 8.2 million paper returns waiting to be reviewed and
processed, according to IRS.gov.
Senator Robert Casey, a Democrat, said the IRS had all but stopped
auditing tax returns of wealthy private business owners, who were
eligible for a 20% tax write-off on their personal taxes, while
lower-earning recipients of the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) were
five times more likely to be audited.
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Signage is seen at the headquarters of the Internal Revenue Service
(IRS) in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 10, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew
Kelly/File Photo
Yellen said those statistics were appalling, and
underscored her concern about the estimated tax gap, which she said
was mostly due to wealthier taxpayers with opaque sources of income.
"The resources of the IRS have been cut to the point where they've
largely cut back on the complicated audits, the ones that are
harder, of high income taxpayers," Yellen told the committee. "The
fact that such a large share goes to audit the EITC is very unfair."
Approving Treasury's budget request for $80 billion over 10 years,
Yellen said, would allow the IRS "to be able to ... make sure that
people are paying the taxes that are due.
"It's very unfair to workers in lower income households the way
things work now," she said.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; additional reporting by David Lawder;
Editing by Bill Berkrot and David Gregorio)
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