Spending
a dollar on the IRS adds $255 to the federal budget.
By Bob Lord
If the most frequently dialed federal agency in America can’t
even answer two-thirds of the millions of phone calls it gets, should the
government cut its budget?
Congress thinks so. That agency is the Internal Revenue Service
(IRS). And lawmakers have hacked at its budget yet again.
Worse still, those cuts will cost more money than they’ll save.
They’re basically “a tax cut to tax cheats,” said IRS commissioner John
Koskinen.
Regardless of your feelings about the IRS, Koskinen is right.
The government has slashed the
enforcement portion of the IRS budget by nearly 20 percent over the last five
years. That’s forcing the IRS to shrink the
number of employees working on enforcement by 15 percent.
Talk about being penny-wise and pound-foolish. For every dollar
the IRS spent in 2013, it collected $255,
according to National Taxpayer Advocate Nina Olson.
Yet, she noted, “that is essentially what has been happening
with respect to IRS funding.” Congress has slashed the IRS budget four times in
five years. And those cuts are feeding the budget deficit that conservatives
supposedly fret about.
It’s all about political expedience. Remember when the IRS faced
accusations of singling out conservative nonprofits for tax scrutiny? Along
with other experts, I predicted that
it would spur further IRS budget cuts. Now Republican lawmakers are taking
their revenge.
It’s a vicious cycle. Critics attack the IRS for making mistakes,
darkening the public’s view of it. That gives political opportunists a chance
to lobby successfully for cuts. A smaller budget virtually guarantees future
mistakes by a cash-strapped agency.
Taxpayer services are underfunded too. The IRS now is unlikely
to answer even half the phone calls it gets from taxpayers, Olson says. The
average wait time is 30 minutes.
So another vicious cycle plays out as taxpayers who try to do
the right thing get frustrated. Evasion rates rise. Pressure on the IRS enforcement
team mounts.
On top of all that, taxpayers and collectors alike are coping
with a tax code that’s more complex than ever. The IRS is responsible for
implementing about 40 new provisions of the Affordable Care Act alone, for
example.
And it could get more absurd.
The Republican Party is fundraising on the promise of abolishing
the IRS altogether, as Citizens for Tax Justice reports.
What happens when a country can’t collect taxes?
“Italy and Greece have been stuck in vicious cycles in which tax
evasion runs rampant,” Washington Post columnist Catherine Rampell recently wrote.
So politicians “raise tax rates to extract more money from the few law-abiding
saps still out there, encouraging people to hide economic activity from even
higher tax rates, and so on.”
That kind of dysfunction hurts honest taxpayers and bankrupts
governments.
Let’s change course before it’s too late.
Bob Lord, a veteran tax lawyer, practices and blogs in Phoenix,
Arizona. He is an Institute for Policy Studies associate fellow. Distributed
via OtherWords.org