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IRS to increase audits next year
Wednesday, November 23, 2005

The IRS, intensifying its crackdown on tax dodgers, plans to increase the number of tax audits it conducts next year.

The agency will focus more of its resources investigating taxpayers with incomes of $100,000 and above. Agents will also examine more returns of high-income taxpayers in search of what they call abusive shelters, or transactions with no real economic purpose other than dodging taxes. The agency will devote particular attention to abusive transactions involving parking money in offshore accounts.

While IRS officials won't discuss specifics of audit targets, they are expected to focus more on self-employed workers who deal largely in cash. Congress recently raised the IRS budget to $10.68 billion, which includes an increase in money earmarked for enforcement activities.

In an interview, IRS Commissioner Mark W. Everson says the assault on shelters includes more audits, litigation and settlement offers. The aim is to strengthen public confidence in the tax system and slash the "tax gap," the difference between what the government collects and what it estimates it should collect. An IRS study this year estimated that tax evasion and other forms of noncompliance cost the government more than quarter of a trillion dollars in lost revenue each year.

"Combating abusive shelters remains the centerpiece of our enforcement efforts," Mr. Everson says. "Average Americans don't want to feel that the big guy gets away with something just because he's rich."

The IRS audited about 1.2 million individual income-tax returns in the fiscal year ended Sept. 30, up more than 20 percent from a year earlier. The government also has gone to court against numerous taxpayers involved in what it considers to be abusive shelters. The agency also recently announced plans to hire private debt-collection agencies next year to help recover billions of dollars of tax debts.

For those who may have used a questionable tax strategy, the IRS recently announced a settlement initiative for taxpayers to step up and settle, with reduced penalties. The offer, which expires Jan. 23, involves 21 transactions the IRS considers abusive.

Some wealthy individuals are turning to foreign entities, such as offshore trusts and insurance policies, as part of their tax-planning and asset-protection strategies. Although U.S. citizens generally must report any foreign accounts and entities with the U.S. government each year, going offshore could add extra roadblocks on an audit trail. Still, some advisers caution that using foreign entities could be a red flag to the IRS.

Despite the increased chance of an audit, some tax professionals still are devising aggressive plans designed to stay one step ahead of the IRS. Some cutting-edge tactics have many layers, involving convoluted combinations of trusts, partnerships, insurance policies, annuities or retirement plans, all of which can have special tax-savings advantages. The idea is to multiply the tax savings, but the arrangement also could make it tough for auditors to track.

Despite the tough talk, IRS statistics show the agency's audit rates generally remain low by historical standards. In fiscal 2005, for instance, just 1.58 percent of taxpayers with annual incomes of $100,000 and above were audited. That is up from 1.25 percent a year earlier, but down from 3.21 percent in 1996. Also, the IRS is doing a larger percentage of its audits by mail, rather than face-to-face interviews, than it did in the late 1990s.

The IRS "has made great strides" in improving enforcement under Mr. Everson, "but it still has a long way to go in restoring compliance," says Donald Alexander, a former IRS lawyer and now a Washington lawyer at Akin Gump.

IRS officials say they are auditing more intelligently these days, making better use of limited staff resources and trying to avoid burdening taxpayers with face-to-face audits on issues that could be resolved by mail. Audits done by mail are "very efficient ways" of handling many issues, says Kevin Brown, commissioner of the IRS's small business/self-employed division.

Officials expect information from a national research project conducted in recent years to help them do a better job of selecting which returns to audit. "We're still finishing up" analyzing the results, which will be used to update the secret formulas the IRS uses to select audit targets, Mr. Everson said.

A recently approved Senate bill would give the IRS new weapons in its war on shelters and other abuses. For example, one provision doubles penalties, interest and fines on taxpayers deliberately concealing taxable income by using offshore accounts. Another would impose tougher tax-shelter penalties on people who promote abusive shelters or "knowingly aid or abet" tax liability understatement, according to a Senate Finance Committee tax staff memorandum.


More people may get hit by the "kiddie" tax.

The Senate recently approved a bill that includes raising the age limit for the so-called kiddie tax to children under 18, instead of under age 14 as in current law. In 2005, if a child under 14 has investment income, the first $800 is tax-free and the next $800 typically is taxed at the child's rate.

Such "unearned" income above $1,600 typically is taxable at the parents' top rate. This is commonly referred to as the kiddie tax, according to The Ernst & Young Tax Guide 2006.


A Senate plan draws fire from a senior IRS official.

Sometimes, the IRS agrees to compromise with those who can't afford to pay what they owe. The Senate agreed to require someone seeking a compromise to make a "good-faith down payment" of 20 percent of any lump-sum offer when they apply, according to a Senate Finance Committee tax staff memo.

Nina Olson, the IRS's National Taxpayer Advocate, says the down-payment provision would make it too tough for some individuals to apply.

BRIEFS: The Senate agreed to extend a special deduction for teachers for another year. The deduction, set to expire at the end of this year, is for as much as $250 for out-of-pocket expenses incurred by secondary and elementary teachers for books and other classroom supplies. ... Thomas Barthold is named acting chief of staff of Congress's Joint Committee on Taxation.

IRS Crackdown

The IRS plans to audit more income-tax returns next year than this year. Here are some areas officials are expected to focus on:

Tax shelters, or transactions with no clear purpose other than avoiding taxes. Officials say "abusive" shelters cost the government billions of dollars in lost revenue.

People making $100,000 a year or more.

Self-employed workers who deal largely in cash, have no taxes withheld, and whose income isn't reported separately to the IRS.

First published on November 23, 2005 at 12:00 am