Changes in Funding for the IRS Will Impact Service During Filing

Is downsizing the IRS part of Trump’s goals? I would say it is. Short staffing an agency such as the IRS makes it difficult to maintain the process and also audit taxpayers. Those who take advantage of greater would welcome an IRS less capable. It, like other parts of the Federal Government, has been faced with cuts to staffing. Granted some of this was be needed. This reduction specifically targets the higher income brackets who may take advantage.

We shall see how bad this one is sooner than the next tax season.

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Summary

The Internal Revenue Service’s (IRS’s) budget funds various activities directly and indirectly affecting the amounts of revenues it collects. Historically, the IRS’s funding has primarily been discretionary. That is, the agency has mostly been funded through annual appropriation acts. Through 2031, however, the agency’s activities are also supported by nearly $80 billion in mandatory funding provided in the 2022 reconciliation act (Public Law 117-169).

The Congressional Budget Office report describes how funding for the IRS affects CBO’s baseline projections of revenues and how the CBO estimates the revenue effects of rescissions of such funding. (Rescissions are provisions of law that cancel budget authority previously provided before it is scheduled to expire.) In addition, the agency estimated the budgetary effects over the next 10 years of three illustrative options that would rescind varying amounts of the IRS’s mandatory funding:

  • A $5 billion rescission would reduce revenues by $5.2 billion over the 2024–2034 period and increase the cumulative deficit for that period by $0.2 billion.
  • A $20 billion rescission would reduce revenues by $44 billion and increase the cumulative deficit by $24 billion.
  • A $35 billion rescission would reduce revenues by $89 billion and increase the cumulative deficit by $54 billion.

In CBO’s assessment, the IRS would respond to a rescission by maintaining its planned spending in the near term and reducing outlays in the final years before the budget authority expires. CBO also expects that the IRS would first curtail enforcement activities that, in its view, will have the lowest average return. Thus, the revenue reduction per dollar rescinded would be larger for a $20 billion rescission than it would be for a $5 billion one and even larger for a $35 billion rescission.

Some History: How Much Has the IRS Workforce Declined?

IRS Personnel Loss is Projected to Decrease Revenues, Adding to the Deficit

Increasing IRS funding to provide for additional enforcement activity either through more staff or improved technology would increase revenue collections, thereby reducing deficits. A recent study found that for every additional $1 spent auditing taxpayers above the 90th percentile, revenues increase by more than $12. For audits below the median income, revenues increase by $5. That means that providing more funding for the IRS to perform its audit function more than pays for itself. Additionally, IRS taxpayer engagement increases taxpayer compliance and revenue collection.

Conclusion