Current:Home > StocksHe's trying to fix the IRS and has $80 billion to play with. This is his plan -VisionFunds
He's trying to fix the IRS and has $80 billion to play with. This is his plan
View
Date:2025-04-15 07:44:05
There are two competing trends: The population of the U.S. has grown at the same time as the workforce of the IRS has shrunk. Meet the man tasked with a 10-year, $80 billion plan to tackle the agency's troubles.
Who is he? The recently-appointed commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service, Danny Werfel.
- Werfel took the job in March, becoming the 50th commissioner in the agency's history.
- Here are some quick figures to get your head around what he is dealing with: The IRS has about 85,000 employees, an annual budget of $12 billion, and collects about $4.1 trillion in tax each year, which represents about 96% of the total gross receipts of the U.S.
What's the big deal? To be blunt, the IRS is struggling on a number of fronts — in ways that can directly impact you.
- The population of the U.S. has grown by about 7% over the last decade. Meanwhile, the workforce of the IRS shrunk between 2010 and 2022 by nearly 20%.
- The U.S. government is investing $80 billion in the agency so it can hire more workers and better collect the taxes it is owed — but not paid — by big business and rich people skirting tax laws. (Side note: Republicans aren't happy with this and have tried unsuccessfully to block the spending)
- The IRS is also facing scrutiny over who it chooses to audit. A study released earlier this year found Black Americans are three times more likely to be audited. At the same time, it's also much easier to audit less wealthy people than billionaires with complex arrangements and lawyers on call.
- NPR's Scott Horsley also reports that last year 9 out of 10 phone calls to the IRS went unanswered. This year, though, the agency has hired 5,000 more people to help staff the phone lines and hold times have been cut from an average of 27 minutes last year to just four minutes this year.
- The IRS also plans to invest a big chunk of that $80 billion into its outdated tech, which was the subject of a harsh assessment from the Government Accountability Office earlier this year (it even dropped the word "archaic" at one point).
Want more finance journalism? Listen to the Consider This episode on the rise and fall of a notorious financial investor.
What is Werfel's plan?
On cracking down on people not paying taxes (and ensuring this is done equitably):
Where we have lost capacity over the years is in our ability to assess high wealth, high income filers.
There are roughly 390,000 of these wealthy and very wealthy filers. And right now the IRS has about 2,600 people to assess. Also really important, is these 390,000 filers, their filings are very voluminous ... and they're very complicated.
We have to increase our capacity to deal with that. And that involves hiring — and not just auditors, but economists and engineers and data scientists to really figure out and assess for the American people what these wealthy filers owe versus what they're paying, and make sure that we're closing that gap.
[And] I'm offering the strongest assurance I can that the audit rates that are in place for people earning under $400,000 a year in small businesses, those audit rates are not going up.
On beefing up the workforce and improving customer service:
We need to meet taxpayers where they are.
Some want to walk into a walk-in center and talk to us in person. And so we have the ability now to reopen walk-in centers that were closed due to underfunding, and fully staff them and offer Saturday hours ... People want the IRS website to work more effectively. And so we can make investments so that [the] web platform is as modern and as good and as functional as your local bank or your favorite airline.
So, with funds, we can start to build out a world class customer service set of solutions that taxpayers deserve.
So, what now?
- While Werfel and the IRS implement the plan, they face ongoing pushback from House Republicans, who claim the agency has targeted conservative groups in the past and will go after middle class Americans — assertions the IRS and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen deny.
- Werfel said building trust was essential to the IRS and it was on a "continuous journey" to improve its service. "We're in a really good place right now, in terms of getting the funding that we need to build our capacity and where our focus should be on serving taxpayers."
Learn more:
- Does the IRS audit some people more often than others?
- The IRS misses billions in uncollected tax each year. Here's why
- WTF does race have to do with taxes?
veryGood! (383)
Related
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Floodwater sweeps away fire truck in China as Tropical Storm Haikui hits southeast coast
- Trump was warned FBI could raid Mar-a-Lago, according to attorney's voice memos
- Horoscopes Today, September 6, 2023
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- The AI-generated song mimicking Drake and The Weeknd's voices was submitted for Grammys
- She's from Ukraine. He was a refugee. They became dedicated to helping people flee war – and saved 11
- A female inmate dies after jumping out of a moving vehicle during a jail transport in Kentucky
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Tennis ball wasteland? Game grapples with a fuzzy yellow recycling problem
Ranking
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- The Biden administration proposes new federal standards for nursing home care
- George Washington University sheltering in place after homicide suspect escapes from hospital
- A cyclone has killed over 20 people in Brazil, with more flooding expected
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Officers fatally shoot man in South Carolina after he kills ex-wife and wounds deputy, sheriff says
- SafeSport Center ‘in potential crisis’ according to panel’s survey of Olympic system
- Interior cancels remaining leases in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
Recommendation
Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
Indiana Gov. Holcomb leading weeklong foreign trade mission to Japan beginning Thursday
West Virginia governor wants lawmakers to revisit law allowing high school athletic transfers
Horoscopes Today, September 6, 2023
The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
Oregon man who was sentenced to death is free 2 years after murder conviction was reversed
A teenager is convicted of murder in a 2022 shooting at a Bismarck motel
Jennifer Love Hewitt Addresses Comments She Looks Different After Debuting Drastic Hair Change