This is the accessible text file for GAO report number GAO-05-416T
entitled 'Internal Revenue Service: Assessment of Fiscal Year 2006 
Budget Request and Interim Results of the 2005 Filing Season' which was 
released on April 14, 2005. 

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Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittee on Oversight, Committee on Ways and Means, 
House of Representatives: 

For Release on Delivery Expected at 12 p.m. EDT Thursday, April 14, 
2005: 

Internal Revenue Service: 

Assessment of Fiscal Year 2006 Budget Request and Interim Results of 
the 2005 Filing Season: 

Statement of James R. White: 
Director: 
Strategic Issues: 

Statement of David A. Powner: 
Director: 
Information Technology Management Issues: 

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-416T]: 

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-05-416T, a report to Subcommittee on Oversight, 
Committee on Ways and Means, House of Representatives:

Why GAO Did This Study:

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has been shifting its priorities 
from taxpayer service to enforcement and its management of Business 
Systems Modernization (BSM) from contractors to IRS staff. Although 
there are sound reasons for these adjustments, they also involve risks.

With respect to the fiscal year 2006 budget request, GAO assessed (1) 
how IRS proposes to balance its resources between taxpayer service and 
enforcement programs and the potential impact on taxpayers, (2) the 
status of IRS's efforts to develop and implement the BSM program, and 
(3) the progress IRS has made in implementing best practices in 
developing its Information Technology (IT) operations and maintenance 
budget. For the 2005 filing season, GAO assessed IRS's performance in 
processing returns and providing taxpayer service.

What GAO Found:

IRS's fiscal year 2006 budget request of $10.9 billion proposes 
increased funding for enforcement, but reduced funding for taxpayer 
service and BSM. However, the potential impact of these changes on 
taxpayers in either the short-or long-term is unclear, because IRS has 
not provided details of proposed taxpayer service reductions, and 
although it is developing long-term goals, they are not yet finalized. 
Because of the proposed reductions and new and improved taxpayer 
services in recent years, this is an opportune time to examine the menu 
of services IRS provides. It may be possible to maintain the overall 
level of service to taxpayers by offsetting reductions in some areas 
with new and improved service in other areas.

Taxpayers and IRS are seeing some payoff from the BSM program, with the 
deployment of initial phases of several modernized systems in 2004. 
Nevertheless, the BSM program continues to be high-risk, in part, 
because projects have incurred significant cost increases and schedule 
delays and the program faces major challenges in areas such as human 
capital and requirements management. As a result of budget reductions 
and other factors, IRS has made major adjustments. It is too early to 
tell what effect these adjustments will have on the program, but they 
are not without risk and could potentially impact future budgets. 
Further, the BSM program is based on strategies developed years ago, 
which, coupled with the delays and changes brought on by budget 
reductions, indicates that it is time for IRS to revisit its long-term 
goals, strategy, and plans for BSM. Because of these challenges, IRS is 
redefining and refocusing the BSM program.

IRS has generally maintained or improved its filing season performance 
in 2005. Processing is more efficient, the accuracy of answers provided 
by telephone assistors is improved, and telephone access is relatively 
comparable to last year. This is particularly noteworthy, because IRS 
received less funding for taxpayer service in 2005 than it spent in 
2004. Because the filing season is not over, the full impact on 
taxpayers and IRS operations is not yet known. However, there are 
indications of slippage in telephone access such as more abandoned 
calls and longer wait times.

IRS Budget Summary for Key Activities, Fiscal Years 2004-2006 (dollars 
in millions):

Taxpayer service; 
Fiscal year 2004 (enacted): $3,710; 
Fiscal year 2005 (enacted): $3,606; 
Fiscal year 2006: (request): $3,567; 
Percent change: (2004-2005): -2.8%; 
Percent change: (2005-2006): -1.1%; 
Percent change: (2004-2006): -3.8%.

Enforcement; 
Fiscal year 2004 (enacted): $6,052; 
Fiscal year 2005 (enacted): $6,392; 
Fiscal year 2006: (request): $6,893; 
Percent change: (2004-2005): 5.6%; 
Percent change: (2005-2006): 7.8%; 
Percent change: (2004-2006): 13.9%.

BSM; 
Fiscal year 2004 (enacted): $388; 
Fiscal year 2005 (enacted): $203; 
Fiscal year 2006: (request): $199; 
Percent change: (2004-2005): -47.6%; 
Percent change: (2005-2006): -2.0%; 
Percent change: (2004-2006): -48.7%.

Source: GAO analysis of IRS data.

Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding.

[End of table]

What GAO Recommends:

GAO recommends that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue supplement the 
2006 budget request with more detailed information on how proposed 
service reductions would impact taxpayers. GAO has recommendations 
still outstanding related to BSM management controls and IT budget 
justification.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-416T.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact James R. White (202) 512-
9110 or whitej@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee: 

We are pleased to participate in the Subcommittee's hearing on the 
Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) fiscal year 2006 budget request and 
performance during the 2005 tax filing season. 

IRS is in the midst of making significant adjustments to its 
modernization strategy to better serve taxpayers and ensure their 
compliance with the nation's tax laws. It is now seven years since the 
passage of the Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 
1998 (RRA 98)[Footnote 1] and IRS is shifting its priorities from 
improving taxpayer service to strengthening tax law enforcement 
efforts. IRS is also adjusting its strategy for managing its Business 
Systems Modernization (BSM) effort by shifting significant program 
management responsibilities from contractor to IRS staff. Although 
there are sound reasons for these adjustments, they also involve risk. 

We have reported that IRS has made progress improving taxpayer service 
since the passage of RRA 98.[Footnote 2] For example, IRS's telephone 
assistance is now more accessible and accurate. Further, IRS is more 
efficient at processing tax returns, in part, because of the growth of 
electronic filing, and has cut processing staff. IRS has also 
implemented some modernized information systems and increased its 
capacity to manage large systems acquisition and development programs. 

However, progress has not been uniform. We have reported on large and 
pervasive declines in IRS's tax law enforcement programs after 1998. We 
have also reported that a number of systems modernization projects were 
over budget and behind schedule.[Footnote 3]

As noted, IRS is shifting its priorities to better address these 
problems. The risk, as IRS shifts its priorities towards enforcement, 
is that some of the gains in the quality of taxpayer service could be 
surrendered. There are analogous risks associated with moving more of 
the management of BSM in-house. 

With these risks in mind, our statement discusses both IRS's fiscal 
year 2006 budget request and 2005 filing season performance to date. To 
address your request, we assessed (1) how IRS proposes to balance its 
resources between taxpayer service and enforcement programs and the 
potential impact on taxpayers, (2) the status of IRS's efforts to 
develop and implement the BSM program, and (3) the progress IRS has 
made in implementing best practices for developing its information 
technology (IT) operations and maintenance budget. With respect to the 
interim results of key 2005 filing season activities, we compared IRS's 
performance to past years' and goals it set for this year. 

Our assessment of the budget request and BSM is based on a comparative 
analysis of IRS's fiscal year 2002 through 2006 budget requests, 
funding, expenditures, other documentation, and interviews with IRS 
officials. Our assessment of the interim results of the filing season 
is based on comparing IRS's performance this year to previous filing 
seasons, viewing operations at a processing center, call sites, and 
walk-in sites, monitoring various production meetings, interviewing IRS 
and Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) officials 
and paid tax practitioners and other external stakeholders, reviewing 
TIGTA and other external reports, and reviewing IRS's Web site. For 
both assessments, we used historical budget and performance data from 
reports and budget requests used by IRS, Department of Treasury, and 
Office of Management and Budget (OMB). In past work, we assessed IRS's 
budget and performance data.[Footnote 4] Since the data sources and 
procedures for producing this year's budget and performance data have 
not significantly changed from prior years, we determined that the 
budget data and filing season performance data were sufficiently 
reliable for the purposes of this report. The budget and performance 
data for fiscal years 2005 and 2006 are subject to change. Regarding 
our analysis of IRS's BSM program, we primarily used the agency's BSM 
expenditure plans to determine the status of the program. To assess the 
reliability of the cost and schedule information contained in these 
plans, we interviewed applicable IRS officials to gain an understanding 
of the data and discuss our use of that data. In addition, we checked 
that information in the plans was consistent with information contained 
in IRS internal briefings. Accordingly, we determined that the data in 
the plans were sufficiently reliable for purposes of this statement. We 
performed our work in Washington, D.C. and Atlanta, Georgia from 
December 2004 through March 2005, in accordance with generally accepted 
government auditing standards. 

In summary, our assessment shows that: 

* IRS's 2006 fiscal year budget request reflects a continuing shift in 
priorities from improving taxpayer service to strengthening enforcement 
efforts, but the potential impact of these changes on taxpayers in both 
the short-and long-term is unclear. IRS is requesting $10.9 billion, an 
increase of 3.7 percent over fiscal year 2005 enacted levels. This 
includes an 8 percent increase for enforcement, and a 1 percent and 2 
percent decrease for taxpayer service and BSM, respectively. IRS has 
not finalized the details on where reductions in taxpayer service would 
occur. In addition, IRS is developing, but currently lacks, long-term 
goals that can help IRS inform stakeholders, including the Congress, 
and aid them in assessing performance and making budget decisions. In 
light of the current budget environment and IRS's improvements in 
taxpayer service over the last several years, this is an opportune time 
to reconsider the menu of services it provides. It may be possible to 
maintain the overall level of assistance to taxpayers by changing the 
menu of services offered, offsetting reductions in some areas with new 
and improved service in other areas. 

* IRS has taken important steps forward towards implementing the BSM 
program by delivering the initial phases of several modernized systems 
in 2004 and early 2005. Nevertheless, BSM continues to be high risk 
because, in part, its projects have incurred significant cost increases 
and schedule delays, and the program continues to face major 
challenges. As a result of funding reductions and other factors, IRS 
has made major adjustments to the BSM program, including reducing the 
management reserve and changing the mix and roles of contractor versus 
federal staff used to manage the program. It is too early to tell what 
effect these adjustments will ultimately have on the BSM program, but 
they are not without risk, could potentially impact future budget 
requests, and will delay the implementation of certain functionality 
that was intended to provide benefit to IRS operations and taxpayers. 
Finally, the BSM program is based on visions and strategies developed 
years ago, which, coupled with the already significant delays the 
program has experienced and the changes brought on by the budget 
reductions, indicates that it is time for IRS to revisit its long-term 
goals, strategy, and plans for BSM, including an assessment of when 
significant future BSM functionality would be delivered. According to 
the Associate Chief Information Officer (CIO) for BSM, IRS is 
redefining and refocusing this program. 

* IRS has made progress toward implementing investment management best 
practices that would improve its budget development and support for its 
IT operations and maintenance funding requests. For example, the recent 
release of a new accounting system included an activity-based cost 
module, which IRS considered to be a necessary action to implement 
these best practices. However, Office of the Chief Financial Officer 
officials stated that IRS needs 3 years of actual costs to have the 
historical data necessary to provide a basis for future budget 
estimates. Accordingly, they expect that IRS will begin using the 
activity-based cost module in formulating the fiscal year 2008 budget 
and will have the requisite 3 years of historical data in time to 
develop the fiscal year 2010 budget. 

Our assessment of the 2005 filing season to date shows that: 

* IRS has generally maintained or improved its 2005 filing season 
performance compared to last year. Electronic filing continues to 
increase, allowing IRS to continue reducing resources devoted to 
processing. However, IRS may not meet this year's electronic filing 
goal and is likely to not to meet its goal of 80 percent of all 
individual tax returns filed electronically by 2007. Access to 
telephone assistors remains relatively comparable to last year, 
although there are other indications of slippage in telephone access 
such as more abandoned calls and longer wait times. The tax law 
accuracy rate for answers provided via telephone or IRS's Web site has 
improved. IRS's performance so far in 2005 is good news, considering 
IRS received $104 million less in fiscal year 2005 than 2004 for 
taxpayer services. IRS plans to absorb this reduction, in part, by 
consolidating paper-processing operations, shifting resources from 
service to enforcement, and reducing some services--for example, 
reducing access to telephone assistors--in 2005. However, the filing 
season is not over, and whether or not IRS will achieve efficiency 
increases and the impact on IRS operations and taxpayers is not yet 
known. 

IRS's Budget Request Continues to Shift Priority from Taxpayer Service 
to Enforcement, but the Short-and Long-term Impacts on Taxpayers Are 
Unclear: 

IRS's fiscal year 2006 budget request reflects a continuing shift in 
priorities by proposing reductions in taxpayer service and increases in 
enforcement activities. The request does not provide details about how 
the reductions will impact taxpayers in the short-term. Nor does IRS 
have long-term goals; thus the contribution of the fiscal year 2006 
budget request to achieving IRS's mission in the long-term is unclear. 
Because of budget constraints and the progress IRS has made improving 
the quality of taxpayer services, this is an opportune time to 
reconsider the menu of services IRS offers. 

IRS Is Proposing Reductions in Taxpayer Service and BSM and Increases 
in Enforcement: 

IRS is requesting $10.9 billion, which includes just over a 1 percent 
decrease for taxpayer service, a 2 percent decrease for BSM, and nearly 
an 8 percent increase for enforcement, as shown in table 1.[Footnote 5] 
As table 1 further shows, the changes proposed in the 2006 budget 
request continue a trend from 2004. In comparison to the fiscal year 
2004 enacted budget, the 2006 budget request proposes almost 4 percent 
less for service, almost 49 percent less for BSM, and nearly 14 percent 
more for enforcement.[Footnote 6]

Table 1: IRS Budget Summary for Key Activities, Fiscal Years 2004-2006 
(dollars in millions): 

Taxpayer service; 
Fiscal year 2004 (enacted): $3,710; 
Fiscal year 2005 (enacted): $3,606; 
Fiscal year 2006: (request): $3,567; 
Percent change: (2004-2005): -2.8%; 
Percent change: (2005-2006): -1.1%; 
Percent change: (2004-2006): -3.8%.

Enforcement; 
Fiscal year 2004 (enacted): $6,052; 
Fiscal year 2005 (enacted): $6,392; 
Fiscal year 2006: (request): $6,893; 
Percent change: (2004-2005): 5.6%; 
Percent change: (2005-2006): 7.8%; 
Percent change: (2004-2006): 13.9%.

BSM; 
Fiscal year 2004 (enacted): $388; 
Fiscal year 2005 (enacted): $203; 
Fiscal year 2006: (request): $199; 
Percent change: (2004-2005): -47.6%; 
Percent change: (2005-2006): -2.0%; 
Percent change: (2004-2006): -48.7%.

Source: GAO analysis of IRS data.

Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding.

[End of table]

As table 1 also shows, taxpayer service sustained a reduction of $104 
million or 2.8 percent between fiscal years 2004 and 2005. According to 
IRS officials, the majority of this reduction was the result of 
consolidating paper-processing operations, shifting resources from 
service to enforcement, and reducing some services. IRS officials said 
that this reduction is not expected to adversely impact the services 
they provide to taxpayers but added that the agency cannot continue to 
absorb reductions in taxpayer service without beginning to compromise 
some services. 

For fiscal years 2005 and 2006, table 2 shows some details of changes 
in both dollars and full-time equivalents (FTE).[Footnote 7] Both are 
shown because funding changes do not translate into proportional 
changes in FTEs due to cost increases for salaries, rent, and other 
items. For example, the $39 million or 1.1 percent reduction in 
taxpayer service translates into a reduction of 1,385 FTEs or 3.6 
percent. Similarly, the over $500 million or 7.8 percent increase in 
enforcement spending translates into an increase of 1,961 FTEs or 3.4 
percent. 

Table 2: IRS Requested Changes in Funding for Taxpayer Service and 
Enforcement, Fiscal Years 2005 and 2006 (requested): 

Program activities: Assistance; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Dollars (in millions): $1,829; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Full-time equivalents: 20,798; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $1,806; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 20,160; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Dollars (in millions): -$23; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Full-time equivalents: -638. 

Program activities: Outreach; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Dollars (in millions): $500; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Full-time equivalents: 2,473; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $466; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 1,905; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Dollars (in millions): -$34; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Full-time equivalents: -568. 

Program activities: Processing; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Dollars (in millions): $1,276; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Full-time equivalents: 15,695; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $1,295; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 15,516; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Dollars (in millions): $19; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Full-time equivalents: -179. 

Program activities: Taxpayer service subtotal; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Dollars (in millions): $3,606; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Full-time equivalents: 38,966; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $3,567; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 37,581; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Dollars (in millions): -$39; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Full-time equivalents: -
1,385. 

Program activities: Research; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Dollars (in millions): $154; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Full-time equivalents: 1,119; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $158; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 1,119; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Dollars (in millions): $4; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Full-time equivalents: 0. 

Program activities: Examination; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Dollars (in millions): $3,478; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Full-time equivalents: 31,498; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $3,712; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 32,284; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Dollars (in millions): $234; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Full-time equivalents: 786. 

Program activities: Collection; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Dollars (in millions): $1,826; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Full-time equivalents: 18,023; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $1,991; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 18,815; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Dollars (in millions): $165; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Full-time equivalents: 792. 

Program activities: Investigation; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Dollars (in millions): $682; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Full-time equivalents: 4,899; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $767; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 5,250; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Dollars (in millions): $85; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Full-time equivalents: 351. 

Program activities: Regulatory; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Dollars (in millions): $253; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Full-time equivalents: 1,912; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $265; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 1,944; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Dollars (in millions): $12; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Full-time equivalents: 32. 

Program activities: Enforcement subtotal; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Dollars (in millions): $6,392; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Full-time equivalents: 57,451; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $6,893; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 59,412; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Dollars (in millions): $500; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Full-time equivalents: 1,961. 

Program activities: Taxpayer service and enforcement total; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Dollars (in millions): $9,998; 
Fiscal year 2005 (estimated): Full-time equivalents: 96,417; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $10,460; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 96,993; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Dollars (in millions): $462; 
Change fiscal year 2005-fiscal year 2006: Full-time equivalents: 576. 

Source: GAO analysis of IRS data. 

Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. 

[End of table]

The difference between changes in dollars and FTEs could be even larger 
because of unbudgeted expenses. Unbudgeted expenses have consumed some 
of IRS's budget increases and internal savings increases over the last 
few years. Unbudgeted expenses include unfunded portions of annual 
salary increases, which can be substantial given IRS's large workforce, 
and other costs such as higher-than-budgeted rent increases. According 
to IRS officials, these unbudgeted expenses accounted for over $150 
million in each of the last 4 years. 

An IRS official also told us they anticipate having to cover unbudgeted 
expenses in 2006. As of March 2005, IRS officials were projecting 
unbudgeted salary increases of at least $40 million. This projection 
could change since potential federal salary increases for 2006 have not 
been determined. 

IRS Is Proposing $39 Million Less for Taxpayer Service, but the Impact 
on Taxpayers Is Unclear: 

The budget request provides some detail on how IRS plans to absorb cost 
increases in the taxpayer service budget. IRS is proposing a gross 
reduction of over $134 million in taxpayer service from reexamining the 
budget's base and plans to use more than $95 million of it to cover 
annual increases such as salaries. This leaves a net reduction of 
nearly $39 million or 1.1 percent in the taxpayer service budget. The 
extent to which IRS is able to achieve the gross reductions will impact 
its ability to use the funds as anticipated. 

Decisions on how the $134 million gross reduction would be absorbed 
were not finalized prior to releasing the budget. According to IRS 
officials, some of the reductions would result from efficiency gains 
such as reducing printing and postage costs; however, others would 
result from reductions in the services provided to taxpayers such as 
shortening the hours of toll-free telephone service operations. The 
officials also said most decisions have now been made about general 
areas for reduction and most changes will not be readily apparent to 
taxpayers. 

Although IRS has made general decisions about the reductions, many of 
the details have yet to be determined. Therefore, the extent of the 
impact on taxpayers in the short term is unclear. For example, IRS 
plans to reduce dependence on field assistance, including walk-in 
sites, but has not reached a final decision on how to reduce services. 
Table 3 provides further detail on how IRS is proposing to reduce 
funding and resources for taxpayer service. 

Table 3: IRS Requested Changes in Funding and Full-time Equivalents for 
Taxpayer Service, Fiscal Years 2005 and 2006: 

Program activities: Assistance: 

Program activities: Assistance: Electronic; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Dollars (in millions): $1,536; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Full-time equivalents: 17,745; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $1,557; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 17,721; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Dollars (in millions): $21; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Full-time equivalents: -24. 

Program activities: Assistance: Field; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Dollars (in millions): 274; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Full-time equivalents: 2,796; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $230; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 2,181; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Dollars (in millions): -$44; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Full-time equivalents: -615. 

Program activities: Assistance: EITC assistance; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Dollars (in millions): $19; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Full-time equivalents: 258; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $19; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 258; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Dollars (in millions): < $1; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Full-time equivalents: 0. 

Program activities: Assistance total; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Dollars (in millions): $1,829; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Full-time equivalents: 20,798; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $1,806; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 20,160; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Dollars (in millions): -$23; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Full-time equivalents: -638. 

Program activities: Outreach: Publication & Media; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Dollars (in millions): $291; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Full-time equivalents: 821; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $276; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 520; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Dollars (in millions): -$15; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Full-time equivalents: -301. 

Program activities: Outreach: Taxpayer Education & Communication; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Dollars (in millions): $203; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Full-time equivalents: 1,592; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $184; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 1,326; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Dollars (in millions): -$19; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Full-time equivalents: -266. 

Program activities: Outreach: EITC Outreach; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Dollars (in millions): $7; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Full-time equivalents: 60; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $7; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 60; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Dollars (in millions): < $1; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Full-time equivalents: 0. 

Program activities: Outreach total; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Dollars (in millions): $500; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Full-time equivalents: 2,473; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $466; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 1,905; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Dollars (in millions): -$34; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Full-time equivalents: -568. 

Program activities: Processing; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Dollars (in millions): $1,276; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Full-time equivalents: 15,695; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $1,295; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 15,516; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Dollars (in millions): $19; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Full-time equivalents: -179. 

Program activities: Taxpayer service total; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Dollars (in millions): $3,606; 
Fiscal year 2005 (actual): Full-time equivalents: 38,966; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Dollars (in millions): $3,568; 
Fiscal year 2006 (requested): Full-time equivalents: 37,581; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Dollars (in millions): -$39; 
Change fiscal year 2005-2006: Full-time equivalents: -1,385. 

Source: GAO analysis of IRS data. 

Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. 

[End of table]

IRS Continues to Request Significant Increases for Enforcement to Build 
on Recent Hiring Gains: 

IRS's fiscal year 2006 budget request is the sixth consecutive year the 
agency has requested additional staffing for enforcement. However, up 
until last year, IRS was unable to increase enforcement staffing; 
unbudgeted costs and other priorities consumed the budget increase. 

IRS's proposal for fiscal year 2006, if implemented as planned, would 
return enforcement staffing in these occupations to their highest 
levels since 1999. Of the more than $500 million increase requested for 
2006, about $265 million would fund enforcement initiatives, over $182 
million would be used in part for salary increases, and over $55 
million is a proposal to transfer funding authority from the Department 
of Justice's Interagency Crime and Drug Enforcement. The $500 million 
increase would be supplemented by internal enforcement savings of $88 
million. As is the case with taxpayer service savings, the extent to 
which IRS achieves enforcement savings will affect its ability to fund 
the new enforcement initiatives. 

The $265 million for new enforcement initiatives consist of: 

* $149.7 million and 920 FTEs to attack corrosive non-compliance 
activity driving the tax gap such as abusive trusts and shelters, 
including offshore credit cards and organized tax resistance;

* $51.8 million and 236 FTEs to detect and deter corrosive corporate 
non-compliance to attack complex abusive tax avoidance transactions on 
a global basis and challenge those who promote their use;

* $37.9 million and 417 FTEs to increase individual taxpayer compliance 
by identifying and implementing actions to address non-compliance with 
filing requirements; increasing Automated Underreporter resources to 
address the reporting compliance tax gap; increasing audit coverage; 
and expanding collection work in walk-in sites;

* $14.5 million and 77 FTEs to combat abusive transactions by entities 
with special tax status by initiating examinations more promptly, 
safeguarding compliant customers from unscrupulous promoters, and 
increasing vigilance to ensure that the assets of tax-exempt 
organizations are put to their intended tax-preferred purpose and not 
misdirected to fund terrorism or for private gain; and: 

* $10.8 million and 22 FTEs to curtail fraudulent refund crimes. 

The $88 million in internal savings would be reinvested to perform the 
following activities: 

* $66.7 million and 585 FTEs to devote resources to front-line 
enforcement activities;

* $14.9 million and 156 FTEs to, in part, address bankruptcy-related 
taxpayer questions; and: 

* $6.7 million and 52 FTEs to address complex, high-risk issues such as 
compliance among tax professionals. 

In the past, IRS has had trouble achieving enforcement staffing 
increases because other priorities, including unbudgeted expenses, have 
absorbed additional funds. IRS achieved some gains in 2004 and expects 
modest gains in 2005. Figure 1 shows that the number of revenue agents 
(those who audit complex returns), revenue officers (those who do field 
collection work), and special agents (those who perform criminal 
investigations) decreased over 21 percent between 1998 and 2003, but 
increased almost 6 percent from 2003 to 2004. 

Figure 1: Revenue Agents, Revenue Officers, and Special Agents, Fiscal 
Years 1998-2006: 

[See PDF for image] 

[A] Fiscal years 2005 and 2006 are IRS projections. 

[End of figure] 

IRS's recent gains in enforcement staffing are encouraging, as tax law 
enforcement continues to remain an area of high risk for the federal 
government because the resources IRS has dedicated to enforcing the tax 
laws have declined, while IRS's enforcement workload--measured by the 
number of taxpayer returns filed--has continually increased.[Footnote 
8] Figure 2 shows the trend in field, correspondence, and total audit 
rates since 1995. Field audits involve face-to-face audits and 
correspondence audits are typically less complex involving 
communication through notices. IRS experienced steep declines in audit 
rates from 1995 to 1999, but the audit rate--the proportion of tax 
returns that IRS audits each year--has slowly increased since 2000. The 
figure shows that the increase in total audit rates of individual 
filers has been driven mostly by correspondence audits, while more 
complex field audits, continue to decline. 

Figure 2: Audit Rate of Individual Income Tax Returns, Fiscal Years 
1995-2004: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

The link between the decline in enforcement staff and the decline in 
enforcement actions, such as audits, is complicated, and the real 
impact on taxpayers' rate of voluntary compliance is not known. This 
leaves open the question of whether the declines in IRS's enforcement 
programs are eroding taxpayers' incentives to voluntarily comply. IRS's 
National Research Program (NRP) recently completed a study on 
compliance by individual tax filers based on tax data provided on 2001 
tax returns. The study estimated that the tax gap--the difference 
between what taxpayers owe and what they pay--is at least $312 billion 
per year as of 2001 and could be as large as $353 billion. This study 
is important for several reasons beyond measuring compliance. It is 
intended to help IRS better target its enforcement actions, such as 
audits, on non-compliant taxpayers, and minimize audits of compliant 
taxpayers. It should also help IRS better understand the impact of 
taxpayer service on compliance. 

IRS Is Developing Long-term Goals That Can Be Used to Assess 
Performance and Make Budget Decisions: 

IRS is developing but currently lacks long-term goals that can be used 
to assess performance and make budget decisions.[Footnote 9] Long-term 
goals and results measurement are a component of the statutory 
strategic planning and management framework that the Congress adopted 
in the Government Performance and Results Act of 1993.[Footnote 10] As 
a part of this comprehensive framework, long-term goals that are linked 
to annual performance measures can help guide agencies when considering 
organizational changes and making resource decisions. 

A recent Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART) review conducted by OMB 
reported that IRS lacks long-term goals.[Footnote 11] As a result, IRS 
has been working to identify and establish long-term goals for all 
aspects of its operations for over a year. IRS officials said these 
goals will be finalized and provided publicly as an update to the 
agency's strategic plan before May 2005. 

For IRS and its stakeholders, such as the Congress, long-term goals can 
be used to assess performance and progress towards these goals, and 
determine whether budget decisions contribute to achieving those goals. 
Without long-term goals, the Congress and other stakeholders are 
hampered in evaluating whether IRS is making satisfactory long-term 
progress. Further, without such goals, the extent to which IRS's 2006 
budget request would help IRS achieve its mission over the long-term is 
unclear. 

This Is an Opportune Time to Review IRS's Menu of Taxpayer Services: 

For at least two reasons, this is an opportune time to review the menu 
of taxpayer services that IRS provides. First, IRS's budget for 
taxpayer services was reduced in 2005 and an additional reduction is 
proposed for 2006. As already discussed, these reductions have forced 
IRS to propose scaling back some services. Second, as we have reported, 
IRS has made significant progress in improving the quality of its 
taxpayer services. For example, IRS now provides many Internet services 
that did not exist a few years ago and has noticeably improved the 
quality of telephone services. This opens up the possibility of 
maintaining the overall level of taxpayer service but with a different 
menu of service choices. Cuts in selected services could be offset by 
the new and improved services. 

Generally, as indicated in the budget, the menu of taxpayer services 
that IRS provides covers assistance, outreach, and processing. 
Assistance includes answering taxpayer questions via telephone, 
correspondence, and face-to-face at its walk-in sites. Outreach 
includes educational programs and the development of partnerships. 
Processing includes issuing millions of tax refunds. 

When considering program reductions, we support a targeted approach 
rather than across-the-board cuts.[Footnote 12] A targeted approach 
helps reduce the risk that effective programs are reduced or eliminated 
while ineffective or lower priority programs are maintained. 

With the above reasons in mind for reconsidering IRS's menu of 
services, we have compiled a list of options for targeted reductions in 
taxpayer service. The options on this list are not recommendations but 
are intended to contribute to a dialogue about the tradeoffs faced when 
setting IRS's budget. The options presented meet at least one of the 
following criteria that we generally use to evaluate programs or budget 
requests.[Footnote 13] These criteria include that the activity: 

* duplicates other efforts that may be more effective and/or efficient;

* historically does not meet performance goals or provide intended 
results as reported by GAO, TIGTA, IRS, or others;

* experiences a continued decrease in demand;

* lacks adequate oversight, implementation and management plans, or 
structures and systems to be implemented effectively;

* has been the subject of actual or requested funding increases that 
cannot be adequately justified; or: 

* has the potential to make an agency more self-sustaining by charging 
user fees for services provided. 

We recognize that the options listed below involve tradeoffs. In each 
case, some taxpayers would lose a service they use. However, the 
savings could be used to help maintain the quality of other services. 
We also want to give IRS credit for identifying savings, including some 
on this list. The options include: 

* closing walk-in sites. As the filing season section of this testimony 
discusses, taxpayer demand for walk-in services has continued to 
decrease and staff answer a more limited number of tax law questions in 
person than staff answer via telephone. 

* limiting the type of telephone questions answered by IRS assistors. 
IRS assistors still answer some refund status questions even though IRS 
provides automated answers via telephone and its Web site. 

* mandating electronic filing for some filers such as paid preparers or 
businesses. As noted, efficiency gains from electronic filing have 
enabled IRS to consolidate paper processing operations. 

* charging for services. For example, IRS provides paid preparers with 
information on federal debts owed by taxpayers seeking refund 
anticipation loans. 

Progress in BSM Implementation, but the Program Remains High Risk and 
Budget Reductions Have Resulted in Significant Adjustments: 

Although IRS has implemented important elements of the BSM program, 
much work remains. In particular, the BSM program remains at high risk 
and has a long history of significant cost overruns and schedule 
delays. Furthermore, budget reductions have resulted in significant 
adjustments to the BSM program, although it is too early to determine 
their ultimate effect. 

IRS Has Made Progress in Implementing BSM, but Much Work Remains: 

IRS has long relied on obsolete automated systems for key operational 
and financial management functions, and its attempts to modernize these 
aging computer systems span several decades. IRS's current 
modernization program, BSM, is a highly complex, multibillion-dollar 
program that is the agency's latest attempt to modernize its systems. 
BSM is critical to supporting IRS's taxpayer service and enforcement 
goals. For example, BSM includes projects to allow taxpayers to file 
and retrieve information electronically and to provide technology 
solutions to help reduce the backlog of collections cases. BSM is 
important for another reason. It allows IRS to provide the reliable and 
timely financial management information needed to account for the 
nation's largest revenue stream and better enable the agency to justify 
its resource allocation decisions and congressional budgetary requests. 

Since our testimony before this subcommittee on last year's budget 
request, IRS has deployed initial phases of several modernized systems 
under its BSM program. The following provides examples of the systems 
and functionality that IRS implemented in 2004 and the beginning of 
2005. 

* Modernized e-File (MeF). This project is intended to provide 
electronic filing for large corporations, small businesses, and tax-
exempt organizations. The initial releases of this project were 
implemented in June and December 2004, and allowed for the electronic 
filing of forms and schedules for the form 1120 (corporate tax return) 
and form 990 (tax-exempt organizations' tax return). IRS reported that, 
during the 2004 filing season, it accepted over 53,000 of these forms 
and schedules using MeF. 

* e-Services. This project created a Web portal and provided other 
electronic services to promote the goal of conducting most IRS 
transactions with taxpayers and tax practitioners electronically. IRS 
implemented e-Services in May 2004. According to IRS, as of late March 
2005, over 84,000 users have registered with this Web portal. 

* Customer Account Data Engine (CADE). CADE is intended to replace 
IRS's antiquated system that contains the agency's repository of 
taxpayer information and, therefore, is the BSM program's linchpin and 
highest priority project. In July 2004 and January 2005, IRS 
implemented the initial releases of CADE, which have been used to 
process filing year 2004 and 2005 1040EZ returns, respectively, for 
single taxpayers with refund or even-balance returns. According to IRS, 
as of March 16, 2005, CADE had processed over 842,000 tax returns so 
far this filing season. 

* Integrated Financial System (IFS). This system replaces aspects of 
IRS's core financial systems and is ultimately intended to operate as 
its new accounting system of record. The first release of this system 
became fully operational in January 2005. 

Although IRS is to be applauded for delivering such important 
functionality, the BSM program is far from complete. Future deliveries 
of additional functionality of deployed systems and the implementation 
of other BSM projects are expected to have a significant impact on 
IRS's taxpayer services and enforcement capability. For example, IRS 
has projected that CADE will process about 2 million returns in the 
2005 filing season. However, the returns being processed in CADE are 
the most basic and constitute less than 1 percent of the total tax 
returns expected to be processed during the current filing season. IRS 
expects the full implementation of CADE to take several more years. 
Another BSM project--the Filing and Payment Compliance (F&PC) project-
-is expected to increase (1) IRS's capacity to treat and resolve the 
backlog of delinquent taxpayer cases, (2) the closure of collection 
cases by 10 million annually by 2014, and (3) voluntary taxpayer 
compliance. As part of this project, IRS plans to implement an initial 
limited private debt collection capability in January 2006, with full 
implementation of this aspect of the F&PC project to be delivered by 
January 2008 and additional functionality to follow in later years. 

BSM Program Has History of Cost Increases and Schedule Delays and Is 
High Risk: 

The BSM program has a long history of significant cost increases and 
schedule delays, which, in part, has led us to report this program as 
high-risk since 1995.[Footnote 14] Appendix II provides the history of 
the BSM life-cycle cost and schedule variances. In January 2005 letters 
to congressional appropriation committees, IRS stated that it had 
showed a marked improvement in significantly reducing its cost 
variances. In particular, IRS claimed that it reduced the variance 
between estimated and actual costs from 33 percent in fiscal year 2002 
to 4 percent in fiscal year 2004. However, we do not agree with the 
methodology used in the analysis supporting this claim. Specifically, 
(1) the analysis did not reflect actual costs, instead it reflected 
changes in cost estimates (i.e., budget allocations) for various BSM 
projects; (2) IRS aggregated all of the changes in the estimates 
associated with the major activities for some projects, such as CADE, 
which masked that monies were shifted from future activities to cover 
increased costs of current activities; and (3) the calculations were 
based on a percentage of specific fiscal year appropriations, which 
does not reflect that these are multiyear projects. 

In February 2002 we expressed concern over IRS's cost and schedule 
estimating and made a recommendation for improvement.[Footnote 15] IRS 
and its prime systems integration support (PRIME) contractor have taken 
action to improve their estimating practices, such as developing a cost 
and schedule estimation guidebook and developing a risk-adjustment 
model to include an analysis of uncertainty. These actions may 
ultimately result in more realistic cost and schedule estimates, but 
our analysis of IRS's expenditure plans[Footnote 16] over the last few 
years shows continued increases in estimated project life-cycle costs 
(see fig. 3). 

Figure 3: Life-cycle Cost Estimates for Key BSM Projects: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

The Associate CIO for BSM stated that he believes that IRS's cost and 
schedule estimating has improved in the past year. In particular, he 
pointed out that IRS met its cost and schedule goals for the 
implementation of the latest release of CADE, which allowed the agency 
to use this system to process certain 1040EZ forms in the 2005 filing 
season. It is too early to tell whether this signals a fundamental 
improvement in IRS's ability to accurately forecast project costs and 
schedules. 

The reasons for IRS's cost increases and schedule delays vary. However, 
we have previously reported that they are due, in part, to weaknesses 
in management controls and capabilities. We have previously made 
recommendations to improve BSM management controls, and IRS has 
implemented or begun to implement these recommendations. For example, 
in February 2002, we reported that IRS had not yet defined or 
implemented an IT human capital strategy, and recommended that IRS 
develop plans for obtaining, developing, and retaining requisite human 
capital resources.[Footnote 17] In September 2003, TIGTA reported that 
IRS had made significant progress in developing a human capital 
strategy but that it needed further development. In August 2004, the 
current Associate CIO for BSM identified the completion of a human 
capital strategy as a high priority. Among the activities that IRS is 
implementing are prioritizing its BSM staffing needs and developing a 
recruiting plan. IRS has also identified, and is addressing, other 
major management challenges in areas such as requirements, contract, 
and program management. For example, poorly defined requirements have 
been among the significant weaknesses that have been identified as 
contributing to project cost overruns and schedule delays. As part of 
addressing this problem, in March 2005, the IRS BSM office established 
a requirements management office, although a leader has not yet been 
hired. 

IRS Is Adjusting the BSM Program in Response to Budget Reductions: 

The BSM program is undergoing significant changes as it adjusts to 
reductions in its budget. Figure 4 illustrates the BSM program's 
requested and enacted budgets for fiscal years 2004 through 
2006.[Footnote 18] For fiscal year 2005, IRS received about 29 percent 
less funding than it requested (from $285 million to $203.4 million). 
According to the Senate report for the fiscal year 2005 Transportation, 
Treasury, and General Government appropriations bill, in making its 
recommendation to reduce BSM funding, the Senate Appropriations 
Committee was concerned about the program's cost overruns and schedule 
delays. In addition, the committee emphasized that in providing fewer 
funds, it wanted IRS to focus on its highest priority projects, 
particularly CADE.[Footnote 19] In addition, IRS's fiscal year 2006 
budget request reflects an additional reduction of about 2 percent, or 
about $4.4 million, from the fiscal year 2005 appropriation. 

Figure 4: Changes in the BSM budget (dollars in millions)A: 

[See PDF for image] 

[A] The BSM account authorizes funds to be obligated for 3 years. 

[End of figure] 

It is too early to tell what effect the budget reductions will 
ultimately have on the BSM program. However, the significant 
adjustments that IRS is making to the program to address these 
reductions are not without risk, could potentially impact future budget 
requests, and will delay the implementation of certain functionality 
that was intended to provide benefit to IRS operations and the 
taxpayer. For example: 

* Reductions in Management reserve/project risk adjustments. In 
response to the fiscal year 2005 budget reduction, IRS reduced the 
amount that it had allotted to program management reserve and project 
risk adjustments by about 62 percent (from about $49.1 million to about 
$18.6 million).[Footnote 20] If BSM projects have future cost overruns 
that cannot be covered by the depleted reserve, this reduction could 
result in (1) increased budget requests in future years or (2) delays 
in planned future activities (e.g., delays in delivering promised 
functionality) to use those allocated funds to cover the overruns. 

* Shifts of BSM management responsibility from the PRIME contractor to 
IRS. Due to budget reductions and IRS's assessment of the PRIME 
contractor's performance, IRS decided to shift significant BSM 
responsibilities for program management, systems engineering, and 
business integration from the PRIME contractor to IRS staff. For 
example, IRS staff are assuming responsibility for cost and schedule 
estimation and measurement, risk management, integration test and 
deployment, and transition management. There are risks associated with 
this decision. To successfully accomplish this transfer, IRS must have 
the management capability to perform this role. Although the BSM 
program office has been attempting to improve this capability through, 
for example, implementation of a new governance structure and hiring 
staff with specific technical and management expertise, IRS has had 
significant problems in the past managing this and other large 
development projects, and acknowledges that it has major challenges to 
overcome in this area. 

* Suspension of the Custodial Accounting Project (CAP). Although the 
initial release of CAP went into production in September 2004, IRS has 
decided not to use this system and to stop work on planned improvements 
due to budget constraints. According to IRS, it made this decision 
after it evaluated the business benefits and costs to develop and 
maintain CAP versus the benefits expected to be provided by other 
projects, such as CADE. Among the functionality that the initial 
releases of CAP were expected to provide were (1) critical control and 
reporting capabilities mandated by federal financial management laws; 
(2) a traceable audit trail to support financial reporting; and (3) a 
subsidiary ledger to accurately and promptly identify, classify, track, 
and report custodial revenue transactions and unpaid assessments. With 
the suspension of CAP, it is now unclear how IRS plans to replace the 
functionality this system was expected to provide, which was intended 
to allow the agency to make meaningful progress toward addressing long-
standing financial management weaknesses. IRS is currently evaluating 
alternative approaches to addressing these weaknesses. 

* Reductions in planned functionality. According to IRS, the fiscal 
year 2006 funding reduction will result in delays in planned 
functionality for some of its BSM projects. For example, IRS no longer 
plans to include Form 1041 (the income tax return for estates and 
trusts) in the fourth release of Modernized e-File, which is expected 
to be implemented in fiscal year 2007. 

The BSM program is based on visions and strategies developed in 2000 
and 2001. The age of these plans, in conjunction with the significant 
delays already experienced by the program and the substantive changes 
brought on by budget reductions, indicate that it is time for IRS to 
revisit its long-term goals, strategy, and plans for BSM. Such an 
assessment would include an evaluation of when significant future BSM 
functionality would be delivered. IRS's Associate CIO for BSM has 
recognized that it is time to recast the agency's BSM strategy because 
of changes that have occurred subsequent to the development of the 
program's initial plans. According to this official, IRS is redefining 
and refocusing the BSM program, and he expects this effort to be 
completed by the end of this fiscal year. 

Additional Actions Needed to Improve Budgeting for IT Operations and 
Maintenance: 

IRS has requested about $1.62 billion for IT operations and maintenance 
in fiscal year 2006, within its proposed new Tax Administration and 
Operations account. Under the prior years' budget structure, these 
funds were included in a separate account, for which IRS received an 
appropriation of about $1.59 billion in fiscal year 2005. The $1.62 
billion requested in fiscal year 2006 is intended to fund the personnel 
costs for IT staff (including staff supporting the BSM program) and 
activities such as IT security, enterprise networks, and the operations 
and maintenance costs of its current systems. We have previously 
expressed concern that IRS does not employ best practices in the 
development of its IT operations and maintenance budget 
request.[Footnote 21] Although IRS has made progress in addressing our 
concern, more work remains. 

The Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) requires federal agencies to be 
accountable for their IT investments and responsible for maximizing the 
value and managing the risks of their major information systems 
initiatives. The Clinger-Cohen Act of 1996 establishes a more 
definitive framework for implementing the PRA's requirements for IT 
investment management. It requires federal agencies to focus more on 
the results they have achieved and introduces more rigor and structure 
into how agencies are to select and manage IT projects. In addition, 
leading private-and public-sector organizations have taken a project-or 
system-centric approach to managing not only new investments but also 
operations and maintenance of existing systems. As such, these 
organizations: 

* identify operations and maintenance projects and systems for 
inclusion in budget requests;

* assess these projects or systems on the basis of expected costs, 
benefits, and risks to the organization;

* analyze these projects as a portfolio of competing funding options; 
and: 

* use this information to develop and support budget requests. 

This focus on projects, their outcomes, and risks as the basic elements 
of analysis and decision making is incorporated in the IT investment 
management approach that is recommended by OMB and GAO. By using these 
proven investment management approaches for budget formulation, 
agencies have a systematic method, on the basis of risk and return on 
investment, to justify what are typically substantial information 
systems operations and maintenance budget requests. 

In our assessment of IRS's fiscal year 2003 budget request, we reported 
that the agency did not develop its information systems operations and 
maintenance request in accordance with the investment management 
approach used by leading organizations. We recommended that IRS prepare 
its future budget requests in accordance with these best 
practices.[Footnote 22] To address our recommendation, IRS agreed to 
take a variety of actions, which it has made progress in implementing. 
For example, IRS stated that it planned to develop an activity-based 
cost model to plan, project, and report costs for business 
tasks/activities funded by the information systems budget. The recent 
release of IFS included an activity-based cost module, but IRS does not 
currently have historical cost data to populate this module. According 
to officials in the Office of the Chief Financial Officer, IRS is in 
the process of accumulating these data. These officials stated that IRS 
needs 3 years of actual costs to have the historical data that would 
provide a basis for future budget estimates. Accordingly, these 
officials expected that IRS would begin using the IFS activity-based 
cost module in formulating the fiscal year 2008 budget request and 
would have the requisite 3 years' of historical data in time to develop 
the fiscal year 2010 budget request. In addition, IRS planned to 
develop a capital planning guide to implement processes for capital 
planning and investment control, budget formulation and execution, 
business case development, and project prioritization. IRS has 
developed a draft guide, which is currently under review by IRS 
executives, and IRS expects it to become policy on October 1, 2005. 
Although progress has been made in implementing best practices in the 
development of the IT operations and maintenance budget, until these 
actions are completely implemented IRS will not be able to ensure that 
its request is adequately supported. 

So Far This Filing Season IRS Has Generally Maintained or Improved 
Performance, Including Telephone Accuracy, with Less Funding: 

Results to date show IRS has generally maintained or improved its 2005 
filing season performance in key areas compared to last year despite a 
decrease in the 2005 budget for taxpayer service. These key areas are 
paper and electronic processing, telephone assistance, IRS's Web site, 
and walk-in assistance. Table 4 shows performance to date in these four 
areas. 

Table 4: IRS Performance in the First Weeks of the Filing Season, 2002-
2005: 

Volume in thousands: 

Actual returns processed[A]: Paper; 
2002: 24,491; 
2003: 22,117; 
2004: 20,232; 
2005: 17,607. 

Actual returns processed[A]: Electronic; 
2002: 35,067; 
2003: 38,627; 
2004: 42,988; 
2005: 45,848. 

Telephone assistance: Total calls[B]; 
2002: 34,489; 
2003: 27,905; 
2004: 29,058; 
2005: 23,340. 

Telephone assistance: Total calls[B]: Answered by assistors; 
2002: 9,208; 
2003: 9,434; 
2004: 10,116; 
2005: 9,421. 

Telephone assistance: Total calls[B]: Answered by automation; 
2002: 25,281; 
2003: 18,471; 
2004: 18,942; 
2005: 13,919. 

Telephone assistance: Total calls[B]: Customer service representative 
level of service; 
2002: 62%; 
2003: 82%; 
2004: 84%; 
2005: 83%. 

Telephone assistance: Average speed of answer[C]; 
2002: 227 seconds; 
2003: 183 seconds; 
2004: 199 seconds; 
2005: 235 seconds. 

Accounts accuracy rate estimates[D]; 
2002: 88%; +/-1%; 
2003: 88%; +/-1%; 
2004: 89%; +/-1%; 
2005: 92%; +/-1%. 

Tax law accuracy rate estimates[D]; 
2002: 84%; +/-1%; 
2003: 81%; +/-1%; 
2004: 76%; +/-1%; 
2005: 87%; +/-1%. 

Internet assistance: Forms and publications downloaded[E]; 
2002: N/A; 
2003: N/A; 
2004: N/A; 
2005: 70,321. 

Internet assistance: Refund status inquiries[F]; 
2002: N/A; 
2003: 9,300; 
2004: 14,300; 
2005: 16,400. 

Walk-in assistance: Total walk-in contacts[G]; 
2002: N/A; 
2003: 2,740; 
2004: 2,433; 
2005: 2,163. 

Walk-in assistance: Returns prepared at IRS walk-in sites[H]; 
2002: 436; 
2003: 291; 
2004: 186; 
2005: 145. 

Walk-in assistance: Returns prepared at volunteer sites[I]; 
2002: 466; 
2003: 594; 
2004: 741; 
2005: 915. 

Source: IRS. 

[A] From January 1 to March 22, 2002; 
March 21, 2003; March 19, 2004; and March 18, 2005. 

[B] Total calls (i.e., calls answered by assistors and automation) and 
CSR level of service are based on actual counts from January 1 to March 
16, 2002; March 15, 2003; March 13, 2004; and March 12, 2005. The 2002 
totals include increased call demand as a result of the Economic Growth 
and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (Pub. L. No. 107-16 (2001). 

[C] From January 1 to March 16, 2002; March 15, 2003; March 13, 2004; 
and March 12, 2005. 

[D] Based on a representative sample estimated at the 90 percent 
confidence level from January to February 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2005. 

[E] As of February 28, 2005. 

[F] From January 1 to March 20, 2003; 2004; and 2005. 

[G] From January 1 to March 15, 2003; March 13, 2004; and March 12, 
2005. 

[H] From January 1 to March 16, 2002; March 15, 2003; March 13, 2004; 
and March 12, 2005. 

[I] From January 1 to March 9, 2002; March 8, 2003; March 13, 2004; and 
March 12, 2005. 

[End of table]

Overall IRS's filing season performance to date is good news because, 
as table 1 shows (page 6), IRS's budget for taxpayer service is $104 
million less than the year before. According to IRS officials, it 
absorb this reduction by generating additional internal savings and 
program reductions. However, because the filing season is not over, the 
extent to which IRS will achieve efficiency gains and the full impact 
of reductions on taxpayers in this or future filing seasons is not yet 
known. 

Processing Has Been Smooth, Staff Continues to Decline, and Electronic 
Filing Continues to Grow but not at a Rate to Meet Long-term Goal: 

As of March 18, IRS processed about 63 million individual income tax 
returns and 57 million refunds. According to IRS data and information 
from external stakeholders such as paid practitioners, processing has 
been uneventful and without significant disruptions. IRS officials 
attribute this year's smooth processing to adequate planning and few 
tax law changes. This year's processing activities are important, in 
part, because for the first time during the filing season, IRS is using 
CADE to process the simplest taxpayer accounts (1040EZ without problems 
or balance due). As we note in the BSM section, CADE is the foundation 
of IRS's modernization effort and will ultimately replace the 
Individual Master File that currently houses taxpayer data for 
individual filers. As of March 16, 2005, CADE has processed over 
842,000 tax returns without significant problems. 

Growth in electronic filing (e-filing) helps fund IRS's modernization. 
Electronic filing allows IRS to control costs by reducing labor-
intensive processing of paper tax returns. E-filing also improves 
taxpayer service by eliminating transcription errors associated with 
processing paper returns. E-filing also has benefits for taxpayers, 
primarily by allowing them to get their refunds in half the time of 
paper filers. 

As shown in figure 5, the number of e-filed returns has increased since 
1999 and the number of paper returns has decreased. The figure also 
shows that these changes have allowed IRS to reduce the staff devoted 
to processing paper returns between 1999 and 2004 by just over 1,100 
staff years. As the number of e-filed returns has increased, the number 
of staff years used to process those returns has not. The decline in 
paper processing staff allowed IRS to close its Brookhaven processing 
center in 2003. In addition, IRS is in the process of closing its paper 
processing operation in Memphis. 

Figure 5: Number of Individual Returns and IRS Staff Years for 
Individual Paper and Electronic Processing, Fiscal Years 1999-2006: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

* Fiscal years 2005 and 2006 are IRS projections and, given the current 
lower e-file growth rates, the estimates may be optimistic. 

Note: Staff years and FTEs are units of measurement that are often used 
interchangeably. According to IRS, an FTE is the equivalent of one 
person working full time for 1 year with no overtime. A staff year 
includes overtime. Therefore, the cost of 1 staff year is equal to the 
cost of one FTE plus overtime. As noted in the figure, staff years for 
paper filing are for selected major activities only. 

Although the growth in e-filing is about 6.7 percent over the same 
period last year, it is growing at a slower rate than previous years. 
Based on the current trend and the fact that the percentage of returns 
e-filed traditionally declines as April 15 approaches, it appears that 
IRS will not achieve its goal of having 68.2 million individual tax 
returns e-filed this year (an 11 percent increase over last year). 

Over recent years, IRS has undertaken numerous initiatives to increase 
e-filing. However, neither this year's current growth rate nor the 
projected annual growth rate will enable IRS to achieve its goal of 80 
percent of all individual tax returns being e-filed in 2007. This goal 
has focused attention on increasing e-filing. As we reported last year, 
IRS officials believe that achieving the goal would require additional 
measures to convert the tens of millions of taxpayers and tax 
practitioners who prepare individual income tax returns on a computer, 
but filed on paper to e-filing. IRS officials also stated that the 
additional measures might need to include legislation that mandates e-
filing for certain classes of returns, such as those prepared by 
practitioners. Last year we reported five states, including California, 
that mandated the e-filing of state tax returns, also showed increases 
in the e-filing of federal returns.[Footnote 23] This year, three 
additional states have introduced mandatory e-filing of state returns 
by tax practitioners. 

Telephone Access Has Remained Relatively Stable and Accuracy Has 
Improved: 

Between January 1 and March 12, IRS received approximately 23 million 
calls. As shown in table 4, IRS's automated service handled nearly 14 
million calls and customer service representatives (CSRs) handled just 
over 9 million. The percentage of taxpayers who attempted to reach CSRs 
and actually got through and received service--referred to as the CSR 
level of service--remained relatively stable at 83 percent compared to 
84 percent at the same time last year. 

IRS reduced its 2005 goal for CSR level of service from 85 percent in 
2004 to 82 percent because of the budget reduction for taxpayer 
service. However, IRS has been able to achieve a relatively stable CSR 
level of service of 83 percent since last year. According to IRS 
officials, this level of performance is due to: 

* staff plans being made before the level of service goal was reduced;

* the agency receiving fewer calls due to fewer tax law changes than in 
2004;

* the agency improving methods for handling calls; and: 

* an increased use of IRS's Web site. 

Although CSR level of service is about the same as last year, down one 
percentage point, there are other indications of slippage in telephone 
access. Specifically, taxpayers are waiting longer to speak to a CSR. 
Wait times have increased by about 35 seconds or 15 percent compared to 
the same period last year. Additionally, the rate at which taxpayers 
abandon their calls to IRS increased from 10 percent to 11.5 percent, 
which translates into about 99,000 calls. The responsible IRS official 
considers the increase in wait time and increase in abandon rate to be 
acceptable, in part because IRS data are showing that the agency is 
using 9 percent fewer FTEs than last year and answering 195 more calls 
per FTE. 

IRS officials said they lowered the CSR level of service goal in 
response to the reduction in the taxpayer service budget, and will 
adjust staffing plans after the filing season to address the taxpayer 
service budget reduction. IRS officials believe the adjustments will 
likely result in a lower level of service than is currently being 
achieved. 

IRS estimates that the accuracy of CSRs' answers to taxpayers' tax law 
questions improved compared to last year. Specifically, tax law 
accuracy increased to an estimated 87 percent as compared to 76 percent 
at the same time last year. This represents a significant change from 
last year, when we drew attention to the declining tax law accuracy 
rate.[Footnote 24] According to IRS officials and staff, the 
improvement is primarily due to formatting changes made in 2004 to the 
guide that CSRs use to help them answer taxpayers' tax law questions 
that have enhanced the usability of the guide. IRS officials stated 
that the revised guide is better and more user-friendly, partly because 
many of the suggested improvements were from CSRs who use the guide 
daily. In addition, IRS officials stated that the improved tax law 
accuracy rate reveals that the previous version of the guide was indeed 
the reason for last year's decline in tax law accuracy, and attributed 
fluctuations in the tax law accuracy rate to changes in the guide in 
past years. 

IRS estimates that accounts accuracy (the accuracy of answers to 
questions from taxpayers about the status of their accounts) has 
improved compared to last year and since 2002. Taxpayers who called 
about their accounts received correct information an estimated 92 
percent of the time, which is an improvement compared to last year's 89 
percent rate and the 88 percent rate seen in 2002 and 2003. The 
responsible IRS official told us that accounts accuracy rates have 
improved because IRS has improved its ability to monitor and manage 
staff, expanded training, and improved its ability to search for 
account information. 

Web Site Performing Well and Used Extensively: 

Various data indicate that IRS's Web site is performing well. We found 
it to be user-friendly because it was readily accessible and easy to 
navigate. Problem areas that we reported in the past, such as the 
search function, were much improved this filing season, thus 
eliminating our previous concerns about the search function. 
Furthermore, an independent weekly study done during the filing season 
has reported that IRS's Web site has ranked in the top 4 out of 40 
government Web sites and that users were able to access the IRS Web 
site in .65 seconds or less. The same independent weekly assessment 
reported that IRS ranked first or second in response time of 
downloading data. Finally, the electronic tax law assistance program on 
IRS's Web site has shown marked improvement this year over last. For 
example, the average response time is down from 3.8 days to 1.6 days 
and the accuracy rate has improved from 56.9 percent to 87.5 
percent.[Footnote 25] According to IRS officials, this significant 
improvement is due to a decrease in the number of tax law questions 
being submitted--down from about 56,000 to 8,700 for the same time 
period. 

IRS's Web site is experiencing extensive usage this filing season based 
on the number of visits, pages viewed, and forms and publications 
downloaded. As of February 28, 2005, the Web site was visited about 83 
million times by users who viewed about 628 million pages. This is the 
first time that IRS has publicly reported the number of visits to and 
number of pages viewed on its Web site. Further, about 70.3 million 
forms and publications had been downloaded this fiscal year through 
February, with about 45 million of those downloads occurring in January 
and February. 

IRS's Web site continues to provide two very important tax service 
features: (1) "Where's My Refund," which enables taxpayers to check on 
the status of their refund and (2) Free File, which provides taxpayers 
the ability to file their tax return electronically for free via IRS's 
Web site. As of March 20, 2005, about 16 million taxpayers accessed the 
"Where's My Refund" feature to check the status of their tax refund--
about a 15 percent increase over the same time period last year. Also, 
IRS provided new functionality for "Where's My Refund" whereby a 
taxpayer whose refund could not be delivered by the Postal Service 
(i.e., returned as undeliverable mail), can change their address on the 
Web site. In addition, as of March 16, 2005, 3.6 million tax returns 
had been filed via Free File, which represents a 44 percent increase 
over the same time period last year. In the 2005 filing season, all 
individual taxpayers are eligible to file free via IRS's Web site. 

Use of IRS's Walk-in Assistance Continues to Decline, While Use of 
Volunteer Assistance Increases: 

As of March 12, assistance provided at IRS's approximately 400 walk-in 
sites declined by 11 percent compared to the same time last year, with 
the number receiving tax preparation assistance declining by about 22 
percent. Staff at those sites provides taxpayers with information about 
their tax accounts and answer a limited scope of tax law 
questions.[Footnote 26] If staff cannot answer taxpayers' questions, 
they are required to refer taxpayers to IRS's telephone operations or 
have taxpayers correspond via IRS's Web site. In combination with 
decreased demand, IRS reduced the staff used at walk-in sites for 
return preparation assistance and continues to encourage taxpayers to 
use volunteer sites for return preparation. These declines are 
consistent with IRS's goal to further limit return preparation and tax 
law assistance at walk-in sites by 2007 and with its 2006 budget 
request. 

Figure 6: Assistance Provided by IRS Walk-in and Volunteer Sites, 2001-
2006 Filing Seasons (in millions): 

[See PDF for image] 

[A] Fiscal years 2005 and 2006 are IRS projections. 

Note: "Other walk-in contacts" includes assistance for account notices, 
tax law inquiries, forms, and compliance work, but not return 
preparation. For the walk-in sites, the time periods covered are 
December 31, 2000, through April 28, 2001; December 30, 2001, through 
April 27, 2002; December 29, 2002, through April 26, 2003; and December 
28, 2003, through April 24, 2004. For volunteer sites, the time period 
covered for 2001 is January 1, 2001, through April 21, 2001; all other 
periods are the same as those for IRS walk-in sites. 

[End of figure] 

As reflected in table 4 and figure 6, in contrast to IRS walk-in sites, 
the number of taxpayers seeking return preparation assistance at 
volunteer sites has increased this year and every year since 2001. 
These sites, staffed by volunteers certified by IRS, do not offer the 
range of services IRS provides, but instead focus on preparing tax 
returns primarily for low-income and elderly taxpayers and operate 
chiefly during the filing season. IRS officials estimated that the 
number of taxpayers receiving assistance at approximately 14,000 
volunteer sites has increased over 23 percent compared to the same time 
last year. 

The shift of taxpayers from walk-in to volunteer sites is important, 
because it has transferred time-consuming services, particularly return 
preparation, from IRS to volunteer sites and allowed IRS to concentrate 
on services that only it can provide such as account assistance or 
compliance work. As a result, IRS has devoted fewer resources to return 
preparation. While this shift is important to IRS, others have been 
more cautious. For example, in her January 2005 report,[Footnote 27] 
the Taxpayer Advocate has expressed concern about the reduction of face-
to-face services, such as those offered at walk-in sites. She stated 
that IRS's plan does not adequately provide for the segment of the 
population that continues to rely on the interaction provided by walk-
in sites. At the same time, last year, we[Footnote 28] and 
TIGTA[Footnote 29] called attention to issues related to the quality of 
service at both IRS walk-in and volunteer sites. IRS has separate 
quality initiatives under way at both IRS walk-in sites and volunteer 
sites, although data remain limited and cannot be compared to prior 
years. 

Conclusions: 

As IRS shifts its priorities to enforcement and faces tight budgets for 
service, the agency will be challenged to maintain the gains it has 
made in taxpayer service. In order to avoid a "swinging pendulum," 
where enforcement gains are achieved at the cost of taxpayer service 
and vice versa, IRS and the Congress would benefit from a set of agreed-
upon long-term goals. Long-term goals would provide a framework for 
assessing budgetary tradeoffs between taxpayer service and enforcement 
and whether IRS is making satisfactory progress towards achieving those 
goals. Similarly, long-term goals could help identify priorities within 
the taxpayer service and enforcement functions. For example, if the 
budget for taxpayer service were to be cut and efficiency gains did not 
offset the cut, long-term goals could help guide decisions about 
whether to make service cuts across the board or target selected 
services. To its credit, IRS has been developing a set of long-term 
goals, so we are not making a recommendation on goals. However, we want 
to underscore the importance of making the goals public in a timely 
fashion, as IRS has planned. The Congress would then have an 
opportunity to review the goals and start using them as a tool for 
holding IRS accountable for performance. 

In addition, the Congress would benefit from more information about the 
short-term impacts of the 2006 budget request on taxpayers. The 2006 
budget request cites a need for reducing the hours of telephone service 
and scaling back walk-in assistance but provides little additional 
detail. Without more detail about how taxpayers will be affected, it is 
difficult to assess whether the 2006 proposed budget would allow IRS to 
achieve its stated intent of both maintaining a high level of taxpayer 
service and increasing enforcement. 

BSM and related initiatives such as electronic filing hold the promise 
of delivering further efficiency gains that could offset the need for 
larger budget increases to fund taxpayer service and enforcement. 
Today, taxpayers have seen payoffs from BSM; however, the program is 
still high risk and budget reductions have caused substantive program 
changes. IRS has recognized it is time to revisit its long-term BSM 
strategy and is currently refocusing the program. As we did with long-
term goals above, we want to underscore the importance of timely 
completion of the revision of the BSM strategy. 

Recommendation: 

We recommend that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue supplement the 
2006 budget request with more detailed information on how proposed 
service reductions would impact taxpayers. 

[End of section]

Appendix I: Description of IRS's Proposed Budget Structure: 

IRS's proposed new budget structure as depicted in figure 7 combines 
the three major appropriations that the agency has had in the past--
Processing, Assistance, and Management; Tax Law Enforcement; and 
Information Systems into one appropriation called Tax Administration 
and Operations. The Business Systems Modernization and Health Insurance 
Tax Credit Administration appropriations accounts remain unchanged. The 
Tax Administration and Operations appropriation is divided among eight 
critical program areas. These budget activities focus on Assistance, 
Outreach, Processing, Examination, Collection, Investigations, 
Regulatory Compliance, and Research. According to IRS, as it continues 
to move forward with developing and implementing this new structure, 
these program areas and the associated resource distributions will be 
refined to provide more accurate costing. 

IRS reported that the new budget structure has a more direct 
relationship to its major program areas and strategic plan. We did not 
evaluate IRS's proposed budget structure as part of this engagement 
because it was not within the scope of our review. However, we have 
recently completed a study on the administration's broader budget 
restructuring effort. In that study we say that, going forward, 
infusing a performance perspective into budget decisions may only be 
achieved when the underlying information becomes more credible and used 
by all major decision makers. Thus, the Congress must be considered a 
partner. In due course, once the goals and underlying data become more 
compelling and used by the Congress, budget restructuring may become a 
better tool to advance budget and performance integration.[Footnote 30]

Figure 7: IRS's Proposed Budget Structure: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

[End of section]

Appendix II: BSM Project Life Cycle Cost/Schedule Variance and Benefits 
Summary: 

The table below shows the life-cycle variance in cost and schedule 
estimates for completed and ongoing Business Systems Modernization 
(BSM) projects, based on data contained in IRS's expenditure plans. 
These variances are based on a comparison of IRS's initial and revised 
(as of July 2004) cost and schedule estimates to complete initial 
operation[Footnote 31] or full deployment[Footnote 32] of the projects. 

Table 5: BSM Project Life Cycle Cost/Schedule Variance and Benefits 
Summary: 

Completed projects: 

Project: Security and Technology Infrastructure Release 1; 
Cost variance (in thousands): +$8,450; 
Reported/revised estimated cost (in thousands): $45,401; 
Schedule variance: (in months): +5; 
Reported/revised estimated completion date: 1/31/02; (initial 
operation)[A]; 
Reported IRS/taxpayer benefits: Provides infrastructure for secure 
telephony and electronic interaction among IRS employees, tax 
practitioners, and taxpayers. 

Project: Customer Communications 2001; 
Cost variance (in thousands): +$14,562; 
Reported/revised estimated cost (in thousands): $60,762; 
Schedule variance: (in months): +9; 
Reported/revised estimated completion date: 2/26/02; (full deployment); 
Reported IRS/taxpayer benefits: Improves telecommunications 
infrastructure, including telephone call management, call routing, and 
customer self-service applications. 

Project: Customer Relationship Management Exam; 
Cost variance (in thousands): -$721; 
Reported/revised estimated cost (in thousands): $9,245; 
Schedule variance: (in months): +3; 
Reported/revised estimated completion date: 9/30/02; (full deployment); 
Reported IRS/taxpayer benefits: Provides commercial, off-the-shelf 
software to IRS revenue agents to allow them to accurately compute 
complex corporate transactions. 

Project: Human Resources Connect; 
Release 1; 
Cost variance (in thousands): +$200; 
Reported/revised estimated cost (in thousands): $10,200; 
Schedule variance: (in months): 0; 
Reported/revised estimated completion date: 12/31/02; (initial 
operation)[A]; 
Reported IRS/taxpayer benefits: Allows IRS employees to access and 
manage their human resources information online. 

Project: Internet Refund/Fact of Filing; 
Cost variance (in thousands): +$12,923; 
Reported/revised estimated cost (in thousands): $26,432; 
Schedule variance: (in months): +14; 
Reported/revised estimated completion date: 9/26/03; (full deployment); 
Reported IRS/taxpayer benefits: Provides instant refund status 
information and instructions for resolving refund problems to taxpayers 
with Internet access. 

Project: Modernized; 
e-File Release 1; 
Cost variance (in thousands): +$21,057; 
Reported/revised estimated cost (in thousands): $50,303; 
Schedule variance: (in months): +6.5; 
Reported/revised estimated completion date: 5/31/04; (initial 
operation)[A]; 
Reported IRS/taxpayer benefits: Provides initial electronic filing 
capability for large corporations, small business, and tax-exempt 
organizations. 

Ongoing projects: 

Project: Modernized; 
e-File Release 2; 
Cost variance (in thousands): 0; 
Reported/revised estimated cost (in thousands): $16,325; 
Schedule variance: (in months): 0; 
Reported/revised estimated completion date: 9/30/04; (initial 
operation); 
Reported IRS/taxpayer benefits: Provides additional functionality to 
support corporate electronic filing and other capabilities, including 
required public access to filed returns for tax-exempt organizations. 

Project: Modernized; 
e-File Release 3; 
Cost variance (in thousands): +$5,300; 
Reported/revised estimated cost (in thousands): $27,175; 
Schedule variance: (in months): 0; 
Reported/revised estimated completion date: 3/31/05; (initial 
operation); 
Reported IRS/taxpayer benefits: Provides additional functionality to 
support electronic filing for tax-exempt organizations and other 
capabilities, including the interface with state retrieval systems. 

Project: e-Services; 
Cost variance (in thousands): +$102,271; 
Reported/revised estimated cost (in thousands): $148,820; 
Schedule variance: (in months): +18; 
Reported/revised estimated completion date: 4/30/05; (full deployment); 
Reported IRS/taxpayer benefits: Provides a Web portal and other e-
Services to promote the goal of conducting most IRS transactions with 
taxpayers and tax practitioners electronically. 

Project: Customer Account Data Engine-Individual Master File Release 1; 
Cost variance (in thousands): +$118,129; 
Reported/revised estimated cost (in thousands): $182,774; 
Schedule variance: (in months): +30; 
Reported/revised estimated completion date: 6/30/05; (full deployment); 
Reported IRS/taxpayer benefits: Provides the modernized database 
foundation to replace the existing individual master file processing 
systems. Facilitates faster refund processing and more timely response 
to taxpayer inquiries for Form 1040EZ filers. 

Project: Integrated Financial System Release 1; 
Cost variance (in thousands): +$73,710; 
Reported/revised estimated cost (in thousands): $173,580; 
Schedule variance: (in months): +15; 
Reported/revised estimated completion date: 6/30/05; (full deployment); 
Reported IRS/taxpayer benefits: Provides a single general ledger for 
custodial and financial data and a platform to integrate core financial 
data with budget, performance, and cost-accounting data. 

Project: Custodial Accounting Project Release 1; 
Cost variance (in thousands): +$91,789; 
Reported/revised estimated cost (in thousands): $138,950; 
Schedule variance: (in months): +33; 
Reported/revised estimated completion date: 11/01/05; (full 
deployment); 
Reported IRS/taxpayer benefits: Provides integrated tax operations and 
internal management information to support evolving decision analytics, 
performance measurement, and management information needs. 

Source: GAO analysis of IRS data. 

[A] Information on the costs and schedule for the full-deployment stage 
of these projects was not available in the BSM expenditure plans. 

[End of table]

[End of section]

Appendix III: How IRS Allocated Expenditures and Full-Time Equivalents 
in Fiscal Year 2004: 

Figures 8 and 9 illustrate how the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) 
allocated expenditures and full-time equivalents (FTE) in fiscal year 
2004. Figure 8 shows total expenditures. The percentage of expenditures 
devoted to contracts decreased from 9 percent in 2002 to 5 percent in 
2004, because of fewer private contracts. The percentage of 
expenditures devoted to other nonlabor costs increased from 8 percent 
in 2002 to 12 percent in 2004, due to increases in miscellaneous costs. 

Figure 8: IRS Expenditures in Fiscal Year 2004: 

[See PDF for image] 

Note: Numbers do not add to the total and percentages do not add to 100 
percent due to rounding. 

[End of figure] 

Figure 9 shows IRS's total FTEs. FTEs have decreased slightly from 
99,180 in 2002 to 99,055 in 2004. We previously reported that 
processing FTEs declined 1 percentage point between 2002 and 2003. 
Between 2003 and 2004, IRS's allocation of FTEs remained similar with a 
1 percentage point increase in conducting examinations, and in 
management and other services. 

Figure 9: How IRS Spent 99,055 FTEs in Fiscal Year 2004: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

(450381): 

FOOTNOTES

[1] Pub. L. No. 105-206 (1998). 

[2] See for example, GAO-05-67, Tax Administration: IRS Improved 
Performance in the 2004 Filing Season, But Better Data on the Quality 
of Some Services Are Needed (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 15, 2004). 

[3] GAO, Internal Revenue Service: Assessment of Fiscal Year 2005 
Budget Request and 2004 Filing Season Performance, GAO-04-560T 
(Washington, D.C.: Mar. 30, 2004). 

[4] GAO, Tax Administration: IRS Needs to Further Refine Its Tax Filing 
Season Performance Measures, GAO-03-143 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 22, 
2002) and GAO, Financial Audit: IRS's Fiscal Years 2004 and 2003 
Financial Statements, GAO-05-103 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 10, 2004). 

[5] IRS is proposing a new budget structure beginning in fiscal year 
2006. The proposal would integrate support costs and the IT 
appropriation into taxpayer assistance and operations appropriation 
with eight program areas involving both taxpayer service and 
enforcement. See appendix I for information on the new budget 
structure. 

[6] The Administration proposes to fully fund enforcement efforts and 
costs as contingent appropriations. This would be achieved by using one 
of two budgetary mechanisms that would allow for an adjustment to total 
discretionary spending for fiscal year 2006 of not more than $446 
million for IRS tax enforcement. 

[7] According to IRS, an FTE is the equivalent of one person working 
full time for 1 year without overtime. 

[8] GAO, High Risk Series: An Update, GAO-05-207 (Washington, D.C.: 
January 2005). 

[9] IRS has one long-term goal set by the Congress in RRA 98 for IRS to 
have 80 percent of all individual income tax returns filed 
electronically. 

[10] Pub. L. No. 103-62 (1993). The Government Performance and Results 
Act of 1993 seeks to improve the management of federal programs, as 
well as their effectiveness and efficiency, by requiring executive 
agencies to prepare multiyear strategic plans, annual performance 
plans, and annual performance reports. Under the Act, strategic plans 
are the starting point for setting goals and measuring progress towards 
them. The Act requires executive agencies to develop strategic plans 
that include an agency's mission statement, long-term general goals, 
and the strategies that the agency will use to achieve these goals. The 
plans should also explain the key external factors that could 
significantly affect achievement of these goals, and describe how long-
term goals will be related to annual performance goals. 

[11] The PART was applied during the fiscal year 2004 budget cycle to 
"programs" selected by OMB. The PART includes general questions in each 
of four broad topics to which all programs are subjected: (1) program 
purpose and design, (2) strategic planning, (3) program management, and 
(4) program results (i.e., whether a program is meeting its long-term 
and annual goals). OMB also makes an overall assessment on program 
effectiveness. 

[12] GAO, 21ST Century Challenges: Reexamining the Base of the Federal 
Government, GAO-05-325SP (Washington, D.C.: February 2005). 

[13] We selected these criteria from a variety of sources based on 
generally accepted government auditing standards. 

[14] For our latest high-risk report, please see GAO, High-Risk Series: 
An Update, GAO-05-207 (Washington, D.C., January 2005). 

[15] GAO, Business Systems Modernization: IRS Needs to Better Balance 
Management Capacity with Systems Acquisition Workload, GAO-02-356 
(Washington, D.C.: Feb. 28, 2002). 

[16] BSM funds are unavailable until the IRS submits to congressional 
appropriations committees for approval a modernization expenditure plan 
that (1) meets the OMB capital planning and investment control review 
requirements; (2) complies with IRS's enterprise architecture; (3) 
conforms with IRS's enterprise life-cycle methodology; (4) is approved 
by IRS, the Department of the Treasury, and OMB; (5) is reviewed by 
GAO; and (6) complies with acquisition rules, requirements, guidelines, 
and systems acquisition management practices. 

[17] GAO-02-356. 

[18] IRS uses the appropriated funds to cover contractor costs related 
to the BSM program. IRS funds internal costs for managing BSM with 
another appropriation. These costs are not tracked separately for BSM-
related activities. 

[19] U.S. Senate, Senate Report 108-342. 

[20] We did not include in our calculations, reductions to specific 
project risk adjustment amounts that were made for reasons other than 
the fiscal year 2005 budget reduction. 

[21] GAO, Internal Revenue Service: Improving Adequacy of Information 
Systems Budget Justification, GAO-02-704 (Washington, D.C., June 28, 
2002). 

[22] GAO-02-704. 

[23] GAO-05-67. 

[24] GAO-04-560T. 

[25] These estimates are based on IRS's random samples of electronic 
tax law assistance questions submitted via IRS's Web site. These 
estimates have a +/-4.6 percentage points range and +/-2.8 percentage 
points range in 2004 and 2005 respectively, with a 90 percent 
confidence level. 

[26] Walk-in site employees are trained and authorized to only answer 
tax law questions on specific tax topics such as those related to 
income, filing status, exemptions, deductions, and related credits. 

[27] National Taxpayer Advocate, 2004 Annual Report to Congress 
(Washington, D.C.: Dec. 31, 2004). 

[28] GAO, Tax Administration: IRS Improved Performance in the 2004 
Filing Season, but Better Data on the Quality of Some Services Are 
Needed, GAO-05-67 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 4, 2004). 

[29] Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, Improvements 
Are Needed to Ensure Tax Returns Are Correctly Prepared at Taxpayer 
Assistance Centers, Reference No. 2004-40-025 (Washington, D.C.: 2003) 
and Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, Improvements Are 
Needed to Ensure Tax Returns Are Prepared Correctly at Internal Revenue 
Service Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Sites, Reference No. 2004-40-
154 (Washington, D.C.: 2004). 

[30] For a more detailed discussion, see GAO, Performance Budgeting: 
Efforts to Restructure Budgets to Better Align Resources with 
Performance, GAO-05-117SP (Washington, D.C.: February 2005). 

[31] Initial operation refers to the point at which a project is 
authorized to begin enterprisewide deployment. 

[32] Full deployment refers to the point at which enterprisewide 
deployment has been completed and a project is transitioned to 
operations and support.