Tax audits bring in 3x more money in subsequent years

June 17, 2023

Tax-audit-large570-612x300

The United States avoided defaulting on its debt, thanks to last-minute deal reached by President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and grudgingly agreed to earlier this month by Congress.

Park of the package was a $21.4 billion cut to money the Internal Revenue Service was supposed to use for tax enforcement. The agreement called for an immediate $1.4 billion reduction, plus the loss of $20 billion over the next two years, most of that coming from the nearly $80 billion in extra funding the IRS was given as part of the Inflation Reduction Act.

Critics of the hit to IRS audit efforts say the cut will dramatically hamper the tax agency's ability to collect all the revenue it is owed, particularly by wealthy tax evaders.

They point to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) analysis that the immediate $1.4 billion reduction in IRS funds will mean a revenue loss of $2.3 billion loss over the next decade, which in turn will increase the federal deficit by $900 million over those 10 years.

Hmmm. If I remember correctly, McCarthy's party wanted a deal that would move Uncle Sam's debt in the other direction.

Collection shouldn't suffer too much: Despite the loss of funding and dire debt projections, the IRS says it expects its tax compliance plans for the next five years to stay roughly the same.

How? The White House plans to repurpose funds during the fiscal 2024 appropriations process to cover the cuts to IRS compliance efforts.

Plus, the IRS always can fall back on a system with which it's way too familiar. "It might be the case in five, six, seven years there might be a need to ask for more IRS funding," said a Biden Administration official.

Audits pay off for years: All this talk of IRS money granted then revoked and its effect on efforts to audit tax evaders brings me to this weekend's Saturday Shout Out.

Even taxpayers who are confident that their filings are correct hate audits. That attitude is why, say a group of Harvard University economists, the IRS examinations are so effective.

Taxpayers who get audited tend to pay more in taxes for years to come, presumably because they don't want it to happen again.

"Getting audited tends to scare taxpayers straight and increase the amount they pay in taxes, voluntarily, for roughly a decade-and-a-half," writes Sam Becker in his Fast Company article Harvard economists have a surprisingly convincing argument in favor of IRS tax audits.

3 times the money going forward: This multiplier effect is roughly an additional $3 more in taxes in years after an audit for every $1 the taxpayer ends up owing after answering IRS questions.

Nathaniel Hendren, professor of economics at Harvard and one of the paper's authors, elaborated on the tax collection multiplier scenario in a Twitter thread.


Becker does a nice job putting all the academic economic speak into plain English. However, feel free to also check out the original source, the Hendren et al 77-page PDF paper titled "A Welfare Analysis of Tax Audits Across the Income Distribution."

You also might find these items of interest:

 

Advertisements

 


 

 

 

 

Share:

The More Tax Posts tab at the top of this page will take you to, well, more tax posts. You also can search below for a tax topic. 

Latest Posts
The latest Dirty Dozen tax scam list is familiar because too many are still falling for the schemes

March 5, 2026

Tax filing season is also peak time for tax scams. Be on the lookout for…

Read More
Hello Tax Season 2026

Happy New Tax Year! Are you ready to file your 2025 tax return? I know, too early to ask. But Tax Day 2026 will be here before we realize it. The Internal Revenue Service deadline to file and pay any tax we owe is the regular April 15 date this year. It’s also Tax Day for most of the states that collect income taxes from their residents, which is most of the states! If that seems too far away right now, don’t worry. As is the case every tax season, the ol’ blog’s tips and other tax reminders should help all of us meet our state and federal responsibilities. Procrastinators also will want to keep an eye on the countdown clock just below. It tracks how much time we have until April’s Tax Day, just in case we put off our annual tax task until the absolutely final hours and decide we need to instead get an extension request into the IRS by that date. (Note: I’m in the Central Time Zone, so adjust accordingly for where you live.)

Comments
Leave the first comment