GAO discussed the Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) tax debt collection
practices. GAO noted that: (1) each year, billions of dollars in taxes
remain unpaid; (2) impediments to improving tax debt collection include
the lack of accurate and reliable accounts receivable data and effective
collection tools and programs, a backlogged receivables inventory,
outdated collection processes, and antiquated computer systems; (3) some
accounts receivable may be overstated, not valid, or owed by deceased or
unlocatable taxpayers and defunct businesses; (4) IRS is modernizing its
information and processing systems, but these actions will not be
completed for several years; (5) although IRS use of private debt
collectors could increase tax collections by locating and encouraging
taxpayers to pay their delinquent taxes, they cannot actually collect
taxes; (6) some states have successfully used private debt collectors to
increase their delinquent tax collections; (7) IRS accounts receivable
have been designated a high-risk area, but IRS cannot make major changes
in its business operations by itself; (8) IRS needs a comprehensive
strategy to guide its efforts to improve tax debt collections, starting
with having accurate and reliable information; and (9) IRS could adopt
private industry practices and use private debt collectors in some
collection-related activities.
Click here for the full GAO Report, PDF Version, 13pgs. 131K