Title: Narrowing the Tax Gap
1Narrowing the Tax Gap
- James B. Mackie III
- Director, Revenue Estimating Division
- Office of Tax Analysis
- U.S. Treasury
2Disclaimer
- Any views or opinions are my own and do not
necessarily reflect the official views of the
U.S. Treasury.
3Bottom Line
- The tax gap is a serious multi-dimensional
problem. - The tax gap can be reduced but not eliminated.
- The Administration is committed to working with
Congress to reduce the tax gap without unduly
burdening compliant taxpayers. - The Treasury has proposed a multi-pronged
approach to reducing the tax gap and has made
specific Budget proposals consistent with this
strategy. - Some budget proposals have been enacted.
-
4Tax Gap Background
5What is the Tax Gap?
- Gross tax gap. The difference between the amount
of tax that taxpayers should pay under the tax
law and the amount they actually pay on time. - Estimate of 345 billion in tax year 2001, 83.7
voluntary compliance rate. - Net tax gap. Gross tax gap less taxes that were
paid voluntarily but late and recoveries from IRS
enforcement activities. - Estimate of 290 billion in tax year 2001, 86.3
net compliance rate
6Sources of the Tax Gap
- Caused by many kinds of errors and omissions.
- Intentional evasion and unintentional errors both
contribute to the tax gap. - Tax complexity leads to unintentional errors and
creates opportunities for intentional evasion. - Better taxpayer service can reduce unintentional
errors. - Cant tell how much of the gap is from
unintentional errors. - Over 80 of the gross tax gap is from
underreporting of income. - Over 40 is underreporting of net business income
(individual income tax and self-employment tax). - About 10 of the gross tax gap is from
underpayment of tax and about 10 from nonfiling.
7Information Reporting and Withholding
- Noncompliance is highest among taxpayers whose
income is not subject to third party information
reporting or withholding. - Withholding. Wages are underreported by 1.
- Information reporting. Interest income,
dividends, social security benefits, pensions,
and unemployment insurance are underreported by
4.5. - No information reporting. Net income from
proprietorships, rents, and royalties is
underreported by 54.
8Information on the Tax Gap is Dated and Incomplete
- Identifying the sources and levels of
noncompliance is critical to designing and
implementing effective remediation. - The main source of information is the National
Research Program (NRP), which has compliance data
from 2001. - NRP looked only at individual income and
self-employment taxes. - Estimates of compliance for other taxes (e.g.,
corporate income tax) are based on information
that is much older studies are 20 years old. - Study of S corporation compliance is in final
stages. - Excise tax compliance has never been studied.
9Reducing the Tax Gap vs. Raising Revenue
- Reducing the tax gap is not the same thing as
raising revenue. - Some tax changes are clearly targeted towards
noncompliant taxpayers and the tax gap, e.g.,
increased information reporting, penalties,
closing specific illegal tax shelters. - Some tax changes raise revenue from compliant
taxpayers and also reduce the tax gap, e.g.,
eliminating the home office deduction or the
charitable deduction. - Some tax changes simply raise revenue without
affecting the tax gap (compliance).
10Can the Tax Gap Be Closed?
- The tax gap can be narrowed, and it is important
to do so. - All Americans should pay their fair share of
taxes. - Expectations have to be realistic.
- The tax gap is a longstanding, persistent
problem. - Compliance rates are about the same as 20 years
ago despite large changes in tax law and in tax
enforcement. - There is no low-hanging fruit in this area.
- former IRS Commissioner Lawrence Gibbs.
- IRS already gets the easy enforcement dollars.
11Can the Tax Gap Be Closed? (cont.)
- Closing the tax gap completely seems infeasible
if not impossible. It would require draconian and
costly measures. - Universal audits.
- Very severe penalties.
- High burden on compliant taxpayers.
- Increase tensions between taxpayers and the
government. - Large reductions in the tax gap would be VERY
difficult to make and might not be worth the cost
imposed on the IRS and on taxpayers. - Same problems as completely closing the tax gap.
- 290 billion per year is a large overstatement of
the achievable reduction in the tax gap. - Improvement in the governments net fiscal
position would be smaller because of the cost of
collection.
12Treasurys Tax Gap StrategyFour Principles
- A Comprehensive Strategy for Reducing the Tax
Gap, OTP, September, 2006. - (1) Address unintentional taxpayer errors and
intentional taxpayer evasion. - (2) Target specific sources of noncompliance.
- (3) Combine enforcement with taxpayer service.
- (4) Respect taxpayer rights and balance
enforcement against taxpayer burdens.
13Seven Specific Strategic Components
- (1) Reduce evasion through legislation and
regulation. - (2) Commit to multi-year compliance research.
- (3) Improve information technology.
- (4) Improve IRS compliance activities.
- (5) Enhance taxpayer service.
- (6) Simplify the tax law.
- (7) Coordinate with partners and stakeholders.
14Implementing the Treasury Strategies
- Made some progress on all fronts.
15Budget Proposals Legislation to Reduce Evasion
- 16 specific proposals in the FY 2008 Budget.
- Expand information reporting (7).
- Three proposals account for most of the revenue.
- Business payments to corporations File an
information return for payments summing to 600
or more to a corporation. - Basis on security sales Brokerage houses, mutual
funds, asset managers, and fiduciaries would be
required to report adjusted basis on sales of
publicly traded securities. - Merchant payment card reimbursements Card
processors must report to the IRS gross
reimbursement payments made to merchants.
16Budget Proposals Legislation to Reduce Evasion
(cont.)
- Improve compliance by business (3).
- These include a proposal to amend the collection
due process rules for employment taxes that has
been enacted in modified form by HR 2206. - Strengthen tax administration (3).
- Make willful failure to file a return a felony.
- Strengthen penalties (3).
- Two have been enacted in modified form by HR
2206. - Increase and extend to other types of returns
penalties on tax preparers for filing erroneous
returns. (Issues MLTN standard, no transition
relief.) - Create an erroneous refund penalty.
- HR 2206 also increased the penalty for writing
bad checks to pay taxes (not a Budget proposal).
17Budget Proposals Legislation to Reduce Evasion
(cont.)
- Modest revenue pick-up (29 billion over ten
years). - Most revenue from information reporting.
- Proposals focus on noncompliance, not raising
revenue by changing the baseline against which
compliance is measured. - Respectful of taxpayer rights and burdens.
- No low-hanging fruit.
18Sidebar Treasury Revenue Estimating for
Enforcement Initiatives
- Two types of revenue effects.
- Direct revenue immediately related to specific
enforcement programs, e.g., penalties collected
and revenues from audits. (These are counted as
revenue from IRS enforcement.) - Indirect revenue from changes in voluntary
compliance caused by the enforcement initiative.
19Sidebar Treasury Revenue Estimating for
Enforcement Initiatives (cont.)
- Three types of enforcement initiatives.
- Legislative initiatives.
- Statutory changes to administrative provisions of
the IRC. - Score direct and indirect revenue effects
(although the effects can be small). - Management initiatives.
- Redeploy existing enforcement resources to
increase efficiency. - Do not score.
- Historical productivity increases already in
baseline tax receipts. - Management decisions are made too frequently to
track and evaluate.
20Sidebar Treasury Revenue Estimating for
Enforcement Initiatives (cont.)
- Resource initiatives.
- Net additions to current service levels of
resources applied to IRS enforcement programs. - Occasionally (rarely) have scored direct effects.
- Little information on which to base indirect
effects. - Generally only large changes would be expected to
yield measurable revenue. - Descore IRS funding reductions controversial.
- Interaction of resources and legislative
initiatives.
21Budget Proposals Legislation to Reduce Evasion
(cont.)
- Rejected proposals (too draconian)
- Require individuals to file 1099s for
transactions with doctors, auto mechanics, dry
cleaners and other service providers. - Require cash transactions to be done with a
payment card or check and require issuer/bank
reporting to IRS. - Substantially increase the number of IRS agents
and audits.
22Budget Proposals Legislation to Increase
Simplicity
- Simplify the tax treatment of families and
savings incentives. - LSA, RSA, ERSA.
- Clarify definition of child, simplify EITC
eligibility, reduce complexity of refundable
child tax credit. - These help to reduce the complexity that causes
unintentional noncompliance.
23Other Budget Proposals
- 410 million in new IRS funding aimed at the tax
gap. - Additional compliance research.
- Investment in information technology.
- Enhancement of enforcement activity.
- Improvements in taxpayer service.
24Other Budget Proposals Additional Compliance
Research
- New studies for the corporate tax, employment
tax, partnerships, and excise taxes. - Update the 2001 National Research Program (NRP)
study. - IRS just announced that will begin these studies
in the fall. - Multi-year rolling methodology will provide
regular updates of the data. - New studies of the effect of IRS taxpayer service
on compliance.
25Other Budget Proposals Information Technology
- Upgrade infrastructure.
- Enhance IT security.
- Continued work on Customer Account Data Engine,
Account Management Services, Modernized e-File,
and Common Services Projects.
26Other Budget Proposals Enhanced Enforcement
- Increase audits of high-risk small business tax
returns and step up collections and prosecutions.
- Expand document matching.
- Increase examination for large complex business
returns, foreign residents, and smaller firms
with international activity. - Withhold refunds for delinquent taxpayers.
- Increase oversight to help prevent third parties
from using tax exempts to reduce taxes. - Increase criminal tax investigations.
27Other Budget Proposals Enhance Taxpayer Service
- Expand voluntary income tax assistance programs
directed towards low income, elderly, limited
English proficiency, and disabled taxpayers. - Improve telephone and Web site services
recommended by the Taxpayer Assistance Blueprint.
28Tax Regulations Increase Compliance
- Targets specific areas of noncompliance.
- Clarifies tax law and increases voluntary
compliance. - Recently published guidance will improve
compliance. - Transfer pricing cross border services.
- Foreign tax credit separation of credit from
income. - Reportable transactions rules (tax shelters)
create transactions of interest category.
29Partners and Stakeholders
- Public roundtable in March
- Hosted by Assistant Sec. Solomon and Commissioner
Everson. - Insights.
- Identify specific causes of tax gap and target
them for reform - Remedies should not impose unreasonable burdens
on compliant taxpayers - Simplify the tax code
- Manage expectations no solution is perfect
- Work with Congressional staff.
- Discuss and refine legislative proposals.
- Increased information sharing with foreign
countries continually updating and expanding tax
exchange information agreements (Brazil, 3/2007)
and renegotiating tax treaties.
30Current Work
- Tax gap project is ongoing.
- Treasury is working actively to determine the
next steps consistent with the principles and
strategies outlined last September.
31Bottom Line(again)
- The tax gap is a serious, multi-dimensional
problem. - Tax gap can be reduced but not eliminated.
- The Administration is committed to working with
Congress to reduce the tax gap without unduly
burdening compliant taxpayers. - The Treasury has proposed a multi-pronged attack
on the tax gap and has made specific Budget
proposals consistent with this strategy. - Some have been enacted.
-