This is the accessible text file for GAO report number GAO-09-567 
entitled 'Tax Administration: IRS Should Evaluate Penalties and Develop 
a Plan to Focus Its Efforts' which was released on July 6, 2009. 

This text file was formatted by the U.S. Government Accountability 
Office (GAO) to be accessible to users with visual impairments, as part 
of a longer term project to improve GAO products' accessibility. Every 
attempt has been made to maintain the structural and data integrity of 
the original printed product. Accessibility features, such as text 
descriptions of tables, consecutively numbered footnotes placed at the 
end of the file, and the text of agency comment letters, are provided 
but may not exactly duplicate the presentation or format of the printed 
version. The portable document format (PDF) file is an exact electronic 
replica of the printed version. We welcome your feedback. Please E-mail 
your comments regarding the contents or accessibility features of this 
document to Webmaster@gao.gov. 

This is a work of the U.S. government and is not subject to copyright 
protection in the United States. It may be reproduced and distributed 
in its entirety without further permission from GAO. Because this work 
may contain copyrighted images or other material, permission from the 
copyright holder may be necessary if you wish to reproduce this 
material separately. 

Report to the Committee on Finance, U.S. Senate: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

June 2009: 

Tax Administration: 

IRS Should Evaluate Penalties and Develop a Plan to Focus Its Efforts: 

GAO-09-567: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-09-567, a report to the Committee on Finance, U.S. 
Senate. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Civil tax penalties are an important tool for encouraging compliance 
with tax laws. It is important that the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) 
administers penalties properly and determines the effectiveness of 
penalties in encouraging compliance. 

In response to a congressional request, GAO determined (1) whether IRS 
is evaluating penalties in a manner that supports sound penalty 
administration and voluntary compliance and, if not, how IRS may be 
able to do so, and (2) whether IRS’s guidance for a new penalty for 
failure to disclose reportable transactions was issued in a timely 
manner and was useful to affected parties, and whether and how IRS has 
assessed the penalty. GAO reviewed IRS documents and guidance, and 
interviewed IRS officials and tax practitioners. 

What GAO Found: 

OSP does not comprehensively evaluate the administration of civil tax 
penalties or their impact on voluntary compliance, but a plan could 
help it do so. OSP has responsibility for administering penalty 
programs and determining the action necessary to promote voluntary 
compliance. According to IRS policy, OSP should collect information to 
evaluate penalties and penalty administration and to determine the 
effectiveness of penalties in promoting voluntary compliance. This 
policy is consistent with positions expressed in 1989 by both an IRS 
Task Force report and by Congress when reforming penalties in 1989, and 
more recently by the National Taxpayer Advocate. OSP does not fulfill 
the responsibilities specified in IRS policy. Rather, OSP analysts 
focus on short-term issues, such as sudden spikes in assessments or 
abatements. OSP officials said that they have not done more to evaluate 
the administration of penalties and their effect on voluntary 
compliance because of resource constraints, methodological barriers, 
and limitations in available databases. 

A plan could help IRS focus its efforts and address the constraints to 
evaluating penalties. In developing a plan, IRS could identify the 
analyses it should do and the resources needed to do them. OSP could 
then determine what resources are available to assist it and what 
additional resources, if any, are needed. A plan also could lay out 
feasible research for evaluating the effect of penalties on voluntary 
compliance. For example, fairness is believed to undergird voluntary 
compliance. Thus, analyses that determine whether penalties are being 
consistently applied across IRS would provide pertinent information. 
Data limitations could be addressed in a plan, as well. The Enforcement 
Revenue Information System (ERIS) contains substantial data on IRS 
enforcement activities, but does not include all of the information 
recommended by the 1989 IRS Task Force report. For example, ERIS does 
not include readily usable information related to taxpayer income that 
could be used to determine equitable treatment of taxpayers. 

IRS issued guidance regarding its implementation of a penalty for 
failure to disclose reportable transactions— transactions IRS 
identified as tax avoidance transactions—within 3 months of the 
provision’s passage. IRS officials said that their criterion for 
issuing timely guidance is whether it was released in time to meet 
customers’ needs. Tax practitioners from two leading practitioner 
organizations said the guidance was issued timely and included 
information they needed. However, the practitioners said more targeted 
outreach about the penalty was needed, specifically regarding 
reportable loss transactions caused by the current economic climate in 
which many taxpayers may experience losses that could trigger the 
reportable transaction requirements. IRS officials recognize the need 
to further raise awareness of the penalty, but their planned efforts 
would reach only a small portion of tax return preparers and taxpayers. 
As of January 2009, IRS has assessed 98 penalties for $13.7 million. In 
addition, 1,188 returns had been assigned to field groups. 

What GAO Recommends: 

The Commissioner of Internal Revenue should direct the Office of 
Servicewide Penalties (OSP) to evaluate penalty administration and 
penalties’ effect on voluntary compliance and develop a plan to focus 
its efforts. The Commissioner also should use IRS’s standard outreach 
methods to again alert taxpayers of the need to disclose reportable 
loss transactions. 

In commenting on a draft of this report, IRS concurred with GAO’s 
recommendations, and summarized the actions it plans to take. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-567]. For more 
information, contact Michael Brostek (202) 512-9110 or 
brostekm@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

IRS Does Not Comprehensively Evaluate the Administration of Tax 
Penalties or Their Impact on Voluntary Compliance, but a Plan Could 
Help It Do So: 

Reportable Transaction Guidance Was Timely Issued, but Could Be More 
Useful to Affected Parties: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Comments from the Internal Revenue Service: 

Appendix II: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Abbreviations: 

ABA: American Bar Association: 

AICPA: American Institute of Certified Public Accountants: 

ERIS: Enforcement Revenue Information System: 

FTA: Federation of Tax Administrators: 

FTD: Failure to Deposit: 

IRC: Internal Revenue Code: 

IRS: Internal Revenue Service: 

NAEA: National Association of Enrolled Agents: 

OSP: Office of Servicewide Penalties: 

OTSA: Office of Tax Shelter Analysis: 

SB/SE: Small Business/Self Employed division: 

TAS: Taxpayer Advocate Service: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

June 5, 2009: 

The Honorable Max Baucus: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Charles E. Grassley: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Finance: 
United States Senate: 

As a part of the Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) enforcement programs 
and activities, civil tax penalties are an important tool for 
encouraging taxpayer compliance with tax laws. It is important that IRS 
administers penalties properly and determines the effectiveness of 
penalties in encouraging compliance. The Internal Revenue Code (I.R.C.) 
has more than 150 penalties. In fiscal year 2007, IRS assessed more 
than 37.6 million civil penalties, totaling more than $29.5 billion, 
while abating--that is, rescinding in whole or in part--more than 4.9 
million civil penalties for more than $11.1 billion. Major reforms to 
civil tax penalties were last made in 1989. 

Your committee has expressed interest in the process IRS follows when 
administering penalties and the effectiveness of the penalty regime, 
and about the implementation of a penalty for failing to disclose 
reportable transactions--transactions IRS has identified as tax 
avoidance transactions or that are substantially similar thereto--and 
whether it was being appropriately assessed. Therefore, we agreed to 
determine (1) whether IRS is evaluating penalties in a manner that 
supports sound penalty administration and voluntary compliance and, if 
not, how IRS may be able to do so and (2) whether guidance for a new 
penalty for the failure to disclose reportable transactions was issued 
in a timely manner and was useful to affected parties, and whether and 
how IRS has assessed the new penalty. 

To determine whether IRS is evaluating penalties in a manner that 
supports sound penalty administration and voluntary compliance, we 
reviewed official documents and guidance, including the Internal 
Revenue Manual. We interviewed officials from the IRS Office of 
Servicewide Penalties (OSP) and the four IRS business divisions (Small 
Business/Self Employed (SB/SE), Large & Mid-Size Business, Tax Exempt 
and Government Entities, and Wage and Investment) to determine their 
roles in penalty administration. In addition, we interviewed state 
officials and reviewed academic studies regarding assessments of 
penalty effectiveness and contacted the Federation of Tax 
Administrators (FTA) for recommendations of states to contact.[Footnote 
1] In all, we spoke with representatives of 25 states.[Footnote 2] To 
determine whether IRS issued guidance for a new penalty for failure to 
include reportable transactions information with returns[Footnote 3] in 
a timely manner that was useful to affected parties and whether and how 
IRS has assessed the new penalty, we reviewed IRS documentation and 
guidance for implementing the penalty and implementation action plans. 
We also interviewed officials from IRS's Office of Tax Shelter Analysis 
(OTSA), Office of Chief Counsel, and the four business units about 
their roles in implementing the penalty, as well as officials from the 
Department of the Treasury's (Treasury) Office of Tax Policy. Finally, 
because they collectively represent a significant portion of tax 
preparers, we contacted the American Institute of Certified Public 
Accountants (AICPA), the American Bar Association (ABA), and the 
National Association of Enrolled Agents (NAEA) and asked to interview 
members who were knowledgeable about the reportable transaction 
penalty. We interviewed nine tax practitioners affiliated with the 
AICPA and the ABA about the timeliness and usefulness of IRS outreach 
efforts regarding the implementation of the reportable transaction 
penalty, as well as their observations on IRS's use of the penalty. The 
NAEA said that its membership had little experience with the reportable 
transaction penalty, and did not provide names of any members for us to 
contact. Because we interviewed a nonprobability sample of 
practitioners, our discussion about the effectiveness of IRS's 
implementation of the reportable transaction penalty cannot be used to 
generalize to any other practitioners or group. Additionally, those we 
spoke with presented their personal views, not those of the 
professional associations through which they were contacted. 

We conducted our work from October 2007 through May 2009 in accordance 
with generally accepted government auditing standards. Those standards 
require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient, 
appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and 
conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that the evidence 
obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions 
based on our audit objectives. 

Background: 

The U.S. tax system depends on the principle of voluntary compliance, 
that is, when taxpayers comply with the law without compulsion or 
threat. Penalties are intended to encourage compliance by supporting 
the tax reporting and remittance standards contained in the I.R.C. 
According to IRS's penalty handbook, in order to advance the fairness 
and effectiveness of the tax system, penalties should be severe enough 
to deter noncompliance, encourage noncompliant taxpayers to comply, be 
objectively proportioned to the offense, and be used to educate 
taxpayers and encourage their future compliance. 

Penalties are assessed either automatically by IRS's systems or as a 
result of audits that reveal the compliance issues. For example, the 
penalty for filing a tax return late is usually assessed automatically 
when IRS's computer system detects a return filed after the filing 
deadline. Penalties such as those assessed against taxpayers involved 
with abusive tax shelters are assessed as a result of audits. 
Supervisors must review and approve the results of an audit to assess a 
penalty. Most penalties can be abated for reasonable cause if IRS 
determines that the taxpayer exercised ordinary business care and 
prudence in determining tax obligations but nevertheless was unable to 
comply with those obligations. Examples of reasonable cause include, 
but are not limited to, serious illness or an inability to obtain 
records. 

Following the release of an IRS Task Force report on civil tax 
penalties in 1989[Footnote 4] Congress made its last major effort to 
reform the tax penalty regime because of concerns that a piecemeal 
approach to legislating civil tax penalties over the course of many 
years resulted in a complex penalty system that was difficult for IRS 
to administer and the taxpayer to comprehend. The legislation, the 
Improved Penalty Administration and Compliance Tax Act,[Footnote 5] was 
enacted in large part to simplify civil tax penalties. For example, the 
act consolidated into one part of the I.R.C. all of the generally 
applicable penalties relating to the accuracy of tax returns and 
reorganized accuracy penalties to eliminate situations where one 
infraction could receive more than one penalty. Overall, the act 
reformed information reporting penalties; accuracy-related penalties; 
preparer, promoter, and protester penalties; and penalties for failure 
to file, pay, withhold, and make timely tax deposits. 

OSP is assigned overall responsibility for IRS's penalty programs. As 
such, OSP is charged with coordinating policy and procedures concerning 
the administration of penalty programs, reviewing and analyzing penalty 
information, researching taxpayer attitudes and opinions, and 
determining appropriate action to promote voluntary compliance. 

Current Treasury regulations[Footnote 6] state that every taxpayer that 
has participated in a reportable transaction[Footnote 7] and that is 
required to file a tax return must attach a disclosure statement to his 
or her return for the taxable year and send a copy to OTSA.[Footnote 8] 
In 2004, the American Jobs Creation Act[Footnote 9] created a new 
penalty for failing to disclose reportable transactions with a tax 
return.[Footnote 10] The purpose of the reportable transaction penalty 
is to promote compliance with taxpayers' duty to disclose their 
participation in transactions IRS has determined to have potential for 
tax avoidance or evasion. For example, a taxpayer claiming a loss on 
their tax return of at least $2 million in a single taxable year must 
separately disclose the transaction to IRS. For most types of 
reportable transactions, the penalty is $10,000 for an individual 
taxpayer's return and $50,000 for other returns, such as business 
returns and returns for benefit plans. For one type of reportable 
transaction, a listed transaction, the amount of the penalty is 
increased to $100,000 for individuals and $200,000 for other returns. 
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue can abate the penalty for a 
reportable transaction, other than a listed transaction,[Footnote 11] 
if abating the penalty would promote compliance with the requirements 
of the I.R.C. and effective tax administration. The decision to abate 
must include a record describing the facts and reasons for the action 
and the amount abated, and any decision to not abate the penalty is not 
subject to judicial review. 

IRS Does Not Comprehensively Evaluate the Administration of Tax 
Penalties or Their Impact on Voluntary Compliance, but a Plan Could 
Help It Do So: 

Although IRS policies state that IRS should collect information to 
evaluate the administration of penalties and their impact on voluntary 
compliance, and IRS is collecting some relevant information, OSP is not 
comprehensively evaluating penalty administration or penalties' impact 
on voluntary compliance. According to IRS policies, OSP is to do the 
following: 

* Administer the penalty statutes in a manner that is fair and 
impartial to both the government and the taxpayer, is consistent across 
taxpayers, and ensures the accuracy of the penalty computation. 

* Collect statistical and demographic information to evaluate penalties 
and penalty administration and to determine the effectiveness of 
penalties in promoting voluntary compliance. 

* Design, administer, and evaluate penalty programs based on how those 
programs can most efficiently encourage voluntary compliance. 

* Continually evaluate the impact of the penalty program on compliance 
and recommend changes when the I.R.C. or penalty administration does 
not effectively promote voluntary compliance. 

These policies are consistent with positions expressed in the 1989 IRS 
Task Force report and by Congress when reforming penalties in 1989 and 
with more recent views expressed by the National Taxpayer Advocate. All 
stressed the need for IRS to evaluate the administration of penalties 
and their impact on voluntary compliance. For example, the task force's 
report and Congress in the conference report for the act that included 
the penalty reform recommended that IRS analyze information concerning 
the administration and impact of penalties for the purpose of 
suggesting changes in compliance programs, educational programs, 
penalty design, and penalty administration. The task force also 
recommended that IRS analyze data to enable IRS, Treasury, and Congress 
to evaluate how well penalties operate and what impact they have on 
voluntary compliance. Similarly, in her 2008 annual report, the 
National Taxpayer Advocate wrote that before serious penalty reform can 
occur, better data about whether and how penalties promote voluntary 
compliance is needed.[Footnote 12] 

However, OSP generally does not fulfill the responsibilities specified 
in IRS policy or as envisioned by the 1989 IRS Task Force report, 
Congress, or the National Taxpayer Advocate. Rather, OSP analysts focus 
most of their efforts on addressing short-term issues, such as sudden 
spikes in assessments or abatements. These analyses are useful and 
should continue, as they could identify emerging problems with how 
penalties are being administered, but they do not constitute a 
comprehensive assessment of penalty administration. 

OSP officials said that they have not done more to evaluate the 
administration of penalties and their effect on voluntary compliance 
primarily because of resource constraints both within OSP and IRS's 
various research units, methodological barriers that impede their 
ability to research the effect of penalties on voluntary compliance, 
and limitations in available databases. 

A Plan Could Help Identify Needed Resources and Support Resource 
Requests: 

OSP does not have a plan for fulfilling its responsibilities. The 
Government Performance and Results Act of 1993[Footnote 13] may be a 
useful resource in developing such a plan as it provides several key 
management principles needed to effectively guide, monitor, and assess 
program implementation. These principles include (1) general and long- 
term goals and objectives, (2) a description of actions to support 
goals and objectives, (3) performance measures to evaluate specific 
actions, (4) schedules and milestones for meeting deadlines, (5) 
identification of resources needed, and (6) evaluation of the program 
with processes to allow for adjustments and changes. This approach is 
intended to ensure that agencies have thought through how the 
activities and initiatives they are undertaking are likely to add up to 
the meaningful result that their programs are intended to accomplish. 

A plan would help to identify resource requirements and support 
resource requests. In developing a plan, OSP would need to identify the 
key penalty issues on which to focus its efforts, the types of analyses 
that would best address those key issues, and the type and amount of 
resources--whether within OSP or elsewhere in IRS--needed to execute 
the plan. Thus, by focusing on what it is attempting to accomplish by 
developing a plan, OSP would be better positioned to determine what 
resources within IRS are available to assist it. Further, a well- 
developed plan can provide policymakers within the executive branch and 
Congress a better basis for determining the appropriate level of 
resources for a program. 

A Plan Could Lay Out Feasible Research for Evaluating the Effect of 
Penalties on Voluntary Compliance: 

Although OSP officials' concerns about methodological barriers to 
determining the effect of penalties on voluntary compliance are valid, 
relevant analyses likely could be performed. Developing a plan would 
help OSP officials determine which analyses could be useful for this 
purpose and possible strategies for furthering the state of knowledge 
on the effect of penalties on compliance. 

OSP officials pointed to several examples of the methodological 
barriers to determining the effect of penalties on voluntary 
compliance. For example, increases in penalty amounts might be 
accompanied by other changes in enforcement activities, such as a 
higher audit rate, and separating the effect of these factors on 
voluntary compliance is difficult. In addition, a number of issues 
other than IRS enforcement activities affect a taxpayer's behavior, 
including income, tax rates, demographics and social factors, and the 
influence of tax practitioners. Another complication is that a penalty 
set at a certain amount may effectively encourage voluntary compliance 
for one type of taxpayer, such as individuals, but not for another type 
of taxpayer, such as businesses. 

Our discussions with state officials and review of academic studies 
raised similar concerns about the methodological barriers. None of the 
25 states we contacted evaluate the impact of penalties on voluntary 
compliance, and FTA was unaware of any states currently doing such 
evaluations. State officials added that limited resources, political 
disinterest, and technological barriers further constrain their penalty 
analysis capacities. Some state officials said that they rely on IRS 
information and research to establish state enforcement priorities and 
similarly would look to IRS for penalty research. The academic studies 
we reviewed concluded, consistent with OSP's view, that measuring the 
impact of penalties on voluntary compliance is difficult because 
numerous variables go into determining a taxpayer's decision to 
voluntarily comply with tax laws. These variables include how risk 
averse a person is and how likely he or she is to attempt to "get away" 
with not complying. 

Nevertheless, some analyses likely would be useful for better 
understanding the effect of IRS penalties on taxpayers' voluntary 
compliance. For example, it is widely believed that taxpayers are more 
likely to comply voluntarily if they believe that the tax code is 
implemented fairly and consistently across taxpayers. The 1989 IRS Task 
Force noted that better knowledge of both penalty applications and the 
perceptions of taxpayers that have been penalized were important in 
ensuring that taxpayers feel they are being treated fairly. Thus, 
analyses that determine whether penalties are being consistently 
applied across IRS so that similarly situated taxpayers receive the 
same penalties could provide pertinent information. 

Penalties are also unlikely to have much effect on voluntary compliance 
if they are not used. Treasury noted the importance of better 
understanding the relationship between penalty administration and 
voluntary compliance in its strategic plan for reducing the tax gap. 
[Footnote 14] The plan states that Treasury wants penalties to be set 
at more appropriate levels because some penalties may be too low to 
change behavior but others may be so high that examiners are reluctant 
to assess them. 

The penalties for failure to provide appropriate information returns 
are an example of penalties that do not appear to be properly 
calibrated to influence compliance. The instructions for certain 
information returns[Footnote 15] require that taxpayers submit the form 
printed with special ink.[Footnote 16] Those that fail to do so are 
subject to a $50 penalty. IRS officials said that this penalty and 
other format-related penalties are not assessed because the cost of 
developing and asserting the penalty was not worth it. Instead, IRS 
officials correct the forms manually. IRS officials said that the 
penalty would have to be raised substantially to make it worthwhile to 
assess. The decision to not assess penalties for this error based only 
on the revenue received from those penalized may have actually 
undermined voluntary compliance. A version of a popular tax preparation 
software package informs taxpayers that IRS has accepted forms that are 
not printed with the special ink. 

In addition, IRS may be able to do certain longitudinal analyses of 
whether taxpayers assessed a penalty in one year become more compliant 
in future years. For example, IRS may be able to determine whether 
taxpayers that were assessed an underpayment penalty one year were 
assessed the same penalty in years that followed. Although multiple 
factors would influence the result, the data might help IRS better 
understand whether the penalty may have any effect on future 
compliance. 

Currently, SB/SE's Research group is working on a project reviewing the 
First Time Abate policy that may provide some information related to 
certain penalties' effect on compliance.[Footnote 17] IRS did not know 
some information about the results of the policy, including the number 
of penalties abated under the policy, the amount of money involved, and 
the number of taxpayers qualifying for the abatement but not receiving 
it. Additionally, other questions have surfaced, including whether the 
policy is fair, whether taxpayers receiving the abatement "game" the 
system by complying for 3 years and then getting the abatement again, 
and, ultimately, whether the policy should be continued. Results of the 
project are expected in the summer of 2010. 

In addition to analyses related to voluntary compliance that could be 
done internally, by developing a plan, OSP may be able to identify 
other means of developing information useful to gauging penalties' 
effect on voluntary compliance. Taxpayer surveys or focus groups, for 
instance, could provide information on taxpayers' perceptions about the 
fairness of penalties. 

IRS could also explore other avenues for supporting research of penalty 
effectiveness, such as encouraging others to examine the relationship 
between penalties and voluntary compliance. For example, IRS hosts an 
annual research conference and 6 forums across the country used to 
discuss tax administration issues with experts and practitioners. These 
conferences and forums have been used to discuss compliance issues. At 
the 2008 IRS Research Conference, papers on measuring or improving tax 
compliance were presented. These types of studies, done independently, 
can potentially add valuable thoughts and information to the discussion 
on how best to encourage and increase taxpayer compliance with tax 
laws. 

Data Limitations Could Be Addressed in a Plan: 

Finally, in developing a plan, OSP could assess options for overcoming 
the limitations in available data that officials say impede its ability 
to both assess the effect of penalties on voluntary compliance and 
perform more sophisticated reviews of IRS's administration of 
penalties. The 1989 IRS Task Force report said IRS needed to develop an 
interactive database available for all management levels to perform ad 
hoc analysis of penalty administration and voluntary compliance. One of 
the task force's recommendations was to develop a database that 
captured the maximum amount of data in order to avoid the expense and 
delay for special master file extracts. With this database, IRS would 
evaluate the equitable treatment of taxpayers with respect to all 
aspects of penalties (e.g., penalty waivers and taxpayer demographic 
information, such as income). 

The Enforcement Revenue Information System (ERIS) contains substantial 
data on all IRS enforcement activities, including penalties. However, 
ERIS does not meet several of the task force's recommendations. For 
example, ERIS does not include readily usable information related to 
taxpayer income or practitioner representation that could be used to 
determine equitable treatment, develop employee training, or provide 
taxpayer education outreach. ERIS is not available at all management 
levels. While the system is used to develop many standard reports, 
officials say a lack of resources has prevented it from producing 
additional reports that could increase understanding of penalties. For 
example, the First Time Abate policy research project is using master 
file extracts instead of ERIS. 

In addition, IRS does not routinely use existing penalty data to 
evaluate the administration of penalties. For example, IRS does not 
identify: 

* penalties with low or high assessment and abatement rates, 

* whether significant differences exist in the abatement rate for high- 
income taxpayers relative to lower-income taxpayers, 

* whether significant differences exist in penalty size between 
taxpayers that negotiate an installment agreement relative to those who 
pay cash, 

* whether returns prepared by a paid preparer are more or less likely 
to have penalties abated, 

* whether penalties are assessed or abated at different rates based on 
the geographic location where the case is worked, 

* whether individual taxpayers receive more or fewer abatements than 
businesses for the same penalties, and: 

* whether the rate of erroneous penalty assessments is increasing or 
decreasing. 

Analyses of trends in penalty data could help IRS identify areas that 
need further investigation and when penalties may not be applied 
consistently and fairly. For example, a low assessment rate could 
indicate that a penalty is effectively deterring noncompliance and that 
the infrequency of its assessment is appropriate. However, a low 
assessment rate might also indicate that a penalty has become outdated 
or is deemed too burdensome to assess. Similarly, a high abatement rate 
could indicate that IRS officials are hesitant to sustain a penalty 
because they deem it too harsh for the infraction. 

IRS changed the process it follows to assess the penalty for an 
employer's failure to deposit the correct amount of taxes for 
employees, known as the Failure to Deposit (FTD) penalty,[Footnote 18] 
based on a trend analysis done by others. The Taxpayer Advocate Service 
(TAS) noted in its 2003 report[Footnote 19] that IRS abated a 
substantial number of FTD penalties and that the higher the penalty, 
the more likely the penalty was to be abated. According to IRS, 24 
percent of FTD penalties had been abated in 2002 accounting for 62 
percent of the assessed dollars. Based in part on TAS's data analysis, 
IRS changed the procedures it follows to assess the FTD penalty by 
sending a notice to taxpayers warning them of possible assessment if 
they did not deposit what they owed. According to a report by the 
Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration,[Footnote 20] this 
procedural change helped lead to a decrease in penalty assessments and 
abatements. 

Reportable Transaction Guidance Was Timely Issued, but Could Be More 
Useful to Affected Parties: 

IRS issued guidance to implement a new penalty for taxpayers that fail 
to disclose a reportable transaction in a timely manner and began 
assessing penalties after audits had been conducted. The reportable 
transaction penalty was effective immediately after its passage in 
October 2004,[Footnote 21] making the development of guidance on how 
IRS would interpret and implement the law important. Within 3 months, 
in January 2005, IRS issued interim guidance to alert taxpayers and 
practitioners to the reportable transaction penalty and how IRS planned 
to implement it.[Footnote 22] For example, the interim guidance 
explains the conditions under which IRS would impose the penalty and 
how it would use the authority to abate the penalty. Officials in the 
Office of Chief Counsel told us that their criterion for issuing 
guidance successfully is whether it was released in time to meet their 
customers' needs. The practitioners we spoke with from two leading 
practitioner organizations said that issuing the interim guidance in 
only 3 months was quick and the guidance included the information they 
needed to understand how IRS would implement the penalty. 

Those same practitioners were concerned that other practitioners may 
lack an understanding of all of the requirements for disclosing 
reportable transactions and suggested that more targeted outreach 
regarding the reportable transaction penalty was needed, since the 
penalty is large and the process to get the penalty abated is 
difficult. As mentioned earlier, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 
or the Commissioner's delegate, can abate the penalty for most types of 
reportable transactions, but if a taxpayer is penalized for a listed 
transaction there is no abatement option. These practitioners said that 
it would be easy to inadvertently violate the provision because 
taxpayers and practitioners may not realize that transactions that seem 
reasonable to them and have resulted in no net gain are considered 
reportable. They noted that if some practitioners or taxpayers are 
associating this penalty only with abusive tax shelters, they may not 
realize all of the situations where the requirement to disclose a 
transaction applies. They added that in the current economic climate 
there are likely to be many transactions that result in a loss that do 
not get disclosed on the required form.[Footnote 23] The practitioners 
said that they were concerned because taxpayers and other practitioners 
may not have been in such situations before, and it is likely that IRS 
will see a significant increase in undisclosed transactions of this 
nature. 

In the 2008 Annual Report,[Footnote 24] TAS also expressed concerns 
that the reportable transaction penalty is being assessed against 
taxpayers for which it was not intended and that the penalty is 
unfairly harsh. According to TAS, the purpose of the penalty is to 
combat tax shelters by penalizing taxpayers that failed to disclose 
that they have entered into transactions deemed aggressive by IRS. 
Because the reportable transaction penalty applies without exception to 
the failure to include disclosure on a return when required, an 
improper tax benefit is not required as long as the tax return reflects 
tax consequences or a tax strategy described in public guidance. 

IRS officials said they conducted standard educational outreach to the 
practitioner community regarding the specifics of the reportable 
transaction penalty. This included sending updates to e-mail groups 
regarding notices and revenue procedures implementing the new penalty 
requirements, postings of the latest news to IRS's Web site, and 
requesting comments on proposed regulations. In addition, officials in 
OTSA said that they had presented information on the penalty to 
practitioner groups as part of larger presentations on civil penalties. 
However, some of the practitioners we spoke with said that in the 
current substantially altered economic climate, some taxpayers may be 
caught unaware of the need to disclose a reportable loss transaction 
and be penalized without a ready avenue for relief. Further, there is 
little basis to reliably predict which taxpayers might be caught in 
this situation. 

IRS officials recognize the need to further raise awareness with 
taxpayers. They plan to use the National Tax Forums[Footnote 25] during 
the summer of 2009 to hold focus groups regarding the reportable 
transaction penalty. The goal of the focus groups is to reach out to 
practitioners who may not understand the disclosure requirements and 
get the thoughts of those who have had experience with the reportable 
transaction penalty. However, at best, IRS would only reach a small 
portion of the tax return preparer community in this fashion even 
though many preparers may end up with clients susceptible to the 
penalty. Using its standard, low-cost outreach methods to again focus 
tax preparers and the public's awareness on the disclosure requirements 
for the reportable loss transaction could reach a wider audience. 

IRS officials said that the majority of tax returns eligible for 
assessment of the penalty were not filed until fall 2005, well after 
the interim guidance had been released, and would not have been audited 
until 2006. IRS officials said that development of these cases takes 
time and that IRS could not assess the penalty until there was 
sufficient basis to believe that a taxpayer had participated in a 
reportable transaction during a specific taxable year, had a disclosure 
requirement, and failed to complete the required form. IRS receives the 
required forms at its Ogden facility but does not assess penalties 
until after referring cases to an examiner. A penalty is only assessed 
after an examiner reviews the case because examiners develop related 
issues that may not be apparent from the face of the form itself. If a 
taxpayer failed to report participation in a reportable transaction, 
IRS would not know of the taxpayer's participation until it examined 
the tax return or investigated the promoter of the transaction. 
Therefore, the majority of cases for which a penalty may have been 
appropriate would not have been identified until late 2006 and 2007. 
According to IRS officials, as of January 2009, IRS had assessed 98 of 
the penalties for $13.7 million and collected $2.7 million. In 
addition, 1,188 returns had been assigned to field groups and 50 
returns were being reviewed by IRS's Appeals Division. 

Conclusions: 

Civil tax penalties play an important role in helping ensure that 
taxpayers make an honest effort to pay the taxes that they owe. Twenty 
years after Congress and an IRS Task Force said that IRS needs to 
conduct more continuous and comprehensive analyses of the penalties it 
administers and their effect on voluntary compliance, and after having 
designated an office with those responsibilities, IRS is not meeting 
this expectation. IRS does not have a plan that identifies how it will 
carry out these responsibilities and address the resource, 
methodological, and data limitations that officials say impede its 
progress. IRS should develop and execute such a plan to better focus 
its efforts and ensure that penalties are being administered 
efficiently, effectively, fairly, and consistent with encouraging 
taxpayers' voluntary compliance. 

IRS issued guidance for the reportable transaction penalty in a timely 
manner following its passage in 2004. However, in the current economic 
climate certain transactions involving losses may subject many 
unsuspecting taxpayers to a harsh penalty. They may be unaware of 
reporting requirements because they have never been in such situations 
before. IRS's planned additional outreach on this penalty is not 
sufficient. IRS should use its standard, low-cost outreach methods to 
alert as many tax return preparers and taxpayers as possible about the 
need to properly report loss transactions to avoid penalties. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

In order to ensure the most efficient, fair, and consistent 
administration of civil tax penalties, and that penalties are achieving 
their purpose of encouraging voluntary compliance, the Commissioner of 
Internal Revenue should direct OSP to evaluate penalty administration 
and penalties' effect on voluntary compliance. The Commissioner also 
should direct OSP to develop and implement a plan to collect and 
analyze penalty-related data. The plan should address the constraints 
officials have identified as impeding progress in analyzing penalties. 

In addition, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue should use IRS's 
standard, low-cost methods of outreach to again alert as many tax 
return preparers and taxpayers as possible about the need to properly 
report loss transactions to avoid penalties. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

The Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement provided written 
comments in a May 26, 2009, letter, which is reprinted in appendix I. 
IRS staff also provided technical comments that we incorporated as 
appropriate. 

IRS agreed that OSP will develop a plan to comprehensively evaluate 
penalty administration and the impact of penalties on voluntary 
compliance. IRS said that such a plan was important in understanding 
the relationship between penalty administration and voluntary 
compliance and in identifying priorities and potential resource needs. 
Developing a comprehensive plan may take time. In the interim, we 
believe that the data IRS currently collects can be used to begin 
useful penalty analyses. For example, IRS could evaluate whether 
penalties are assessed or abated at different rates based on the 
geographic location of the office responsible for the case or whether 
significant differences exist in the abatement rate for high-income 
taxpayers relative to lower-income taxpayers. Such analyses could be 
done now and help IRS determine whether penalties are being applied 
consistently. 

IRS also agreed to undertake outreach to ensure that taxpayers are 
again alerted to the situations where disclosure of reportable 
transactions is needed. 

As agreed with your offices, unless you publicly announce the contents 
of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 30 days 
from the report date. At that time, we will send copies to the Chairman 
and Ranking Member, House Committee on Ways and Means; the Secretary of 
the Treasury; the Commissioner of Internal Revenue; and other 
interested parties. This report also will be available at no charge on 
the GAO Web site at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff have any questions concerning this report, please 
contact me on (202) 512-9110 or brostekm@gao.gov. Contact points for 
our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found 
on the last page of this report. Key contributors to this report are 
listed in appendix II. 

Signed by: 

Michael Brostek: 
Director, Tax Issues Strategic Issues Team: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Comments from the Internal Revenue Service: 

Department Of The Treasury: 
Internal Revenue Service: 
Deputy Commissioner: 
Washington, D.C. 20224: 

May 26, 2009: 

Mr. Michael Brostek: 
Director, Strategic Issues: 
United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Mr. Brostek: 

Thank you for the opportunity to review the Government Accountability 
Office's (GAO) draft report entitled "Tax Administration - IRS Should 
Evaluate Penalties and Develop a Plan to Focus Its Efforts (Job Code 
GAO-09-567)." 

We recognize that civil tax penalties are an important tool for 
encouraging compliance with tax laws. Effective administration of 
penalty application is critical in ensuring fair and equitable 
treatment of taxpayers and ensuring voluntary compliance. 

The Office of Servicewide Penalties (OSP) has overall responsibility 
for the Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) civil penalty program. We 
concur that an OSP comprehensive plan to evaluate the administration of 
civil tax penalties to understand the relationship between penalty 
administration and voluntary compliance is important. Additionally, 
such a plan will be useful in identifying priorities and in determining 
additional potential resource needs. We agree that this analysis would 
likely result in a better understanding of the effect of IRS penalties 
on taxpayers' voluntary compliance. 

Your report also stresses the importance of collecting information to 
evaluate penalty administration. OSP is in agreement and has already 
commissioned IRS Research to conduct an analysis using Masterfile data 
on its behalf. For example, OSP requested that IRS Research complete a 
project on the First Time Abatement policy for Failure to File, Failure 
to Pay, and Failure to Deposit penalties. 

We appreciate the suggestions that you provided in your report and will 
carefully consider the findings as we develop the OSP plan. 

The enclosed response addresses each recommendation separately. 

If you have any questions, please contact Christopher Wagner, 
Commissioner, Small Business/Self-Employed Division at (202) 622-0600. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Linda E. Stiff: 

Enclosure: 

[End of letter] 

Enclosure: 

Recommendation: 

In order to ensure the most efficient, fair, and consistent 
administration of civil tax penalties, and that penalties are achieving 
their purpose of encouraging voluntary compliance, the Commissioner of 
Internal Revenue should direct OSP to evaluate penalty administration 
and penalties effect on voluntary compliance. The Commissioner also 
should direct OSP to develop and implement a plan to collect and 
analyze penalty related data. The plan should address the constraints 
officials have identified as impeding progress in analyzing penalties. 

Comment: 

IRS's OSP will develop a plan to comprehensively evaluate penalty 
administration and the impact of penalties on voluntary compliance. 
Such a plan will be useful in identifying priorities and in determining 
additional potential resource needs. 

Recommendation: 

In addition, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue should use IRS's 
standard, low cost methods of outreach to again alert as many tax 
return preparers and taxpayers as possible about the need to properly 
report loss transactions to avoid penalties. 

Comment: 

We will work with our Communications staff to use the standard outreach 
methods to again alert taxpayers of the situations where disclosure is 
needed. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Michael Brostek, (202) 512-9110 or brostekm@gao.gov: 

Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contact named above, Jonda R. Van Pelt, Assistant 
Director; Julia T. Coulter; Benjamin C. Crawford; Alison Hoenk; Ellen 
M. Rominger; Elwood D. White; and John M. Zombro made key contributions 
to this report. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] FTA provides services to state tax authorities and administrators. 
These services include research and information exchange, training, and 
intergovernmental and interstate coordination. FTA staff members 
regularly monitor the activities of state tax agencies and the federal 
government in order to serve as a clearinghouse on topics important to 
tax administrators. 

[2] We spoke with officials from Alabama, Arizona, California, 
Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Illinois, Iowa, Indiana, Louisiana, Maine, 
Massachusetts, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, New York, North Carolina, 
Oklahoma, Oregon, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Washington, and 
Wisconsin. To select the states, we reviewed information contained on 
state tax bureau Web sites, such as press releases related to 
penalties, and contacted FTA for recommendations. 

[3] 26 U.S.C. § 6707A. 

[4] See Executive Task Force for the Commissioner's Penalty Study, 
Report on Civil Tax Penalties (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 22, 1989). 

[5] The Improved Penalty Administration and Compliance Tax Act was 
enacted as part of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989. Pub. 
L. No. 101-239 (1989). 

[6] Treasury Regulation § 1.6011-4. 

[7] Currently, reportable transactions include: (1) listed 
transactions, which are the same as or substantially similar to one of 
the types of transactions that IRS has determined to be tax avoidance 
transactions; (2) confidential transactions, which are transactions 
that are offered to a taxpayer or a related party under conditions of 
confidentiality and for which a taxpayer or a related party paid an 
advisor a minimum fee; (3) transactions with contractual protection, 
which are transactions for which a taxpayer has, or a related party 
has, the right to a full refund or partial refund of fees if all or 
part of the intended tax consequences from the transaction are not 
sustained; (4) loss transactions, which are transactions that result in 
a taxpayer claiming a loss under IRC section 165 exceeding specified 
amounts; and (5) transactions of interest, which are the same as or 
substantially similar to one of the types of transactions that IRS has 
identified by notice, regulation or other form of published guidance as 
transactions of interest. The regulations state that the fact that a 
transaction is a reportable transaction does not affect the legal 
determination of whether the taxpayer's treatment of the transaction is 
proper. 

[8] IRS Form 8886, Reportable Transaction Disclosure Statement. When 
IRS identifies a transaction as a listed transaction after a taxpayer 
has filed a return reflecting participation in the transaction, the 
taxpayer has 90 days to file a disclosure statement with OTSA. 

[9] Pub. L. No. 108-357 (2004). 

[10] 26 U.S.C. § 6707A. 

[11] As of May 2009, there is a bill in the Senate and a bill in the 
House of Representatives that would eliminate the abatement provisions 
and add an exception to the penalty for failure to disclose reportable 
transactions when there is reasonable cause for such failure. See S. 
765, April 1, 2009, and H.R. 2143, April 28, 2009. 

[12] National Taxpayer Advocate, 2008 Annual Report to Congress, vol. 2 
(Washington, D.C.: Dec. 31, 2008). 

[13] Pub. L. No. 103-62 (1993). 

[14] Department of the Treasury, Office of Tax Policy, A Comprehensive 
Strategy for Reducing the Tax Gap (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 26, 2006). 

[15] Examples include Form 1096, Annual Summary and Transmittal of U.S. 
Information Returns, and Form 1099, Miscellaneous Income. 

[16] The special ink is a red drop-out ink. It is colored in such a way 
as to be invisible to optical scanning devices, increasing the 
efficiency of data processing by allowing the scanner to skip 
nonessential information. 

[17] The First Time Abate policy is an exam program that grants relief 
to certain taxpayers who receive a failure to file, pay, or deposit 
penalty. Taxpayers with a clean history for the 3 years prior to 
receiving the penalty may have it abated. No reason is required. The 
only caveat is that they must contact IRS regarding the penalty. 

[18] 26 U.S.C. § 6656. 

[19] Taxpayer Advocate Service, National Taxpayer Advocate 2003 Annual 
Report to Congress (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 31, 2003). 

[20] Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, Federal Tax 
Deposit Penalties Have Been Significantly Reduced, but Additional Steps 
Could Further Reduce Avoidable Penalty Assessments, Reference Number 
2005-30-136 (Washington, D.C.: September 2005). 

[21] Pub. L. No. 108-357 (2004). 

[22] Notice 2005-11. 

[23] Specifically, these transactions are loss transactions resulting 
in a claim for a loss under I.R.C. § 165 of at least $10 million in any 
single taxable year or $20 million in any combination of taxable years 
for corporations or partnerships that have only corporations as 
partners; $2 million in any single taxable year or $4 million in any 
combination of taxable years for all other partnerships and 
individuals, S corporations, or trusts; and $50,000 in any single 
taxable year for individuals or trusts if the loss arises with respect 
to I.R.C. § 988 relating to foreign currency transactions. 

[24] Taxpayer Advocate Service, National Taxpayer Advocate 2008 Annual 
Report to Congress (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 31, 2008). 

[25] The National Tax Forums are held annually in multiple locations 
across the United States. Many groups, including the AICPA, the ABA, 
the NAEA, the National Association of Tax Professionals, the National 
Society of Accountants, and the National Society of Tax Professionals 
participate in the forums. 

[End of section] 

GAO's Mission: 

The Government Accountability Office, the audit, evaluation and 
investigative arm of Congress, exists to support Congress in meeting 
its constitutional responsibilities and to help improve the performance 
and accountability of the federal government for the American people. 
GAO examines the use of public funds; evaluates federal programs and 
policies; and provides analyses, recommendations, and other assistance 
to help Congress make informed oversight, policy, and funding 
decisions. GAO's commitment to good government is reflected in its core 
values of accountability, integrity, and reliability. 

Obtaining Copies of GAO Reports and Testimony: 

The fastest and easiest way to obtain copies of GAO documents at no 
cost is through GAO's Web site [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. Each 
weekday, GAO posts newly released reports, testimony, and 
correspondence on its Web site. To have GAO e-mail you a list of newly 
posted products every afternoon, go to [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov] 
and select "E-mail Updates." 

Order by Phone: 

The price of each GAO publication reflects GAO’s actual cost of
production and distribution and depends on the number of pages in the
publication and whether the publication is printed in color or black and
white. Pricing and ordering information is posted on GAO’s Web site, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/ordering.htm]. 

Place orders by calling (202) 512-6000, toll free (866) 801-7077, or
TDD (202) 512-2537. 

Orders may be paid for using American Express, Discover Card,
MasterCard, Visa, check, or money order. Call for additional 
information. 

To Report Fraud, Waste, and Abuse in Federal Programs: 

Contact: 

Web site: [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/fraudnet/fraudnet.htm]: 
E-mail: fraudnet@gao.gov: 
Automated answering system: (800) 424-5454 or (202) 512-7470: 

Congressional Relations: 

Ralph Dawn, Managing Director, dawnr@gao.gov: 
(202) 512-4400: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street NW, Room 7125: 
Washington, D.C. 20548: 

Public Affairs: 

Chuck Young, Managing Director, youngc1@gao.gov: 
(202) 512-4800: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street NW, Room 7149: 
Washington, D.C. 20548: