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Internal Revenue Service - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Internal Revenue Service

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Seal of the Internal Revenue Service
Seal of the Internal Revenue Service

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is the United States federal government agency that collects taxes and enforces the internal revenue laws. The IRS is a bureau of the Department of the Treasury. The official U.S. Treasury regulations provide (in part):

The Internal Revenue Service is a bureau of the Department of the Treasury under the immediate direction of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. The Commissioner has general superintendence of the assessment and collection of all taxes imposed by any law providing internal revenue. The Internal Revenue Service is the agency by which these functions are performed.[1]

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Bureau of Internal Revenue

In 1862, during the Civil War, President Lincoln and Congress created the office of Commissioner of Internal Revenue and enacted an income tax to pay war expenses (see Revenue Act of 1862). The position of Commissioner exists today and he is the head of the Internal Revenue Service.

The organization created to enforce these taxes was named for the internal revenue to be collected (and was formerly called the "Bureau of Internal Revenue"), in contrast to U.S. government institutions that collected external revenue through duties and tariffs. The income tax was repealed 10 years later. In 1894, Congress revived the income tax, but the following year the Supreme Court of the United States ruled, in Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co., that taxes on capital gains, dividends, interest, rents, and the like were direct taxes on property, and that the statute in question was unconstitutional because it had not apportioned the direct taxes among the states according to population. In 1913, the states ratified the 16th Amendment. In subsequent decisions the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the Sixteenth Amendment removed the requirement that had been imposed in Pollock that apportionment — and the source of the income — be considered with respect to income taxes.

The IRS has its National Capital offices in the greater Washington, DC area, and in particular does most of its computer programming in Maryland. It operates various service centers around the country (currently ten; these are the locations to which taxpayers mail their returns); these centers do the actual tax processing; different types of tax processing take place in various centers (such as the distinction between individual and business tax processing). It also operates three computer centers in different locations around the country.

[edit] Name change and reorganization

In the 1950s, career professional employees replaced the patronage system. Currently, only the IRS Commissioner and Chief Counsel are selected by the President and confirmed by the Senate. As early as the year 1929, the Bureau of Internal Revenue began using the name "Internal Revenue Service" on at least one tax form.[2] In 1953 the name change to the "Internal Revenue Service" was formalized in Treasury Decision 6038.[3]

[edit] Reorganization of the late 1990s

As a by-product of hearings on abusive conduct by IRS employees, Congress enacted the Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998.[4] As a result of that Act the IRS now functions under four major operating divisions: Large & Mid-Size Business (LMSB), Small Business / Self-Employed (SB/SE), Wage and Investment (W&I), and Tax Exempt & Government Entities (TE/GE). The IRS also includes a criminal law enforcement division.

[edit] Flooding at IRS headquarters building

The main headquarters building of the IRS is located at 1111 Constitution Avenue, N.W. in Washington, D.C., near the Old Post Office. The IRS headquarters building was closed in June 2006 as a result of heavy flooding. According to a July 12, 2006 letter from Senator Max Baucus (Dem.-Montana), a ranking member of the U.S. Senate Finance Committee, the sub-basement of the building was filled with water to a depth of twenty feet, and electrical and maintenance equipment in the sub-basement was about 95% damaged or destroyed. The IRS and the General Services Administration announced that the building would remain closed through late 2006. The employees who worked in the building — numbering over two thousand — had been temporarily transferred to other offices at 15 other buildings in the Washington, D.C. area. Computerworld reported that some IRS employees were also allowed to telecommute while the building was closed.[5]

On December 8th, 2006, the IRS said in a press release that "the phased move-in of more than 2,000 IRS employees" had begun.[6] Most staff would have returned by December 19th but "a small number of employees will return after Jan. 1." This IRS press release estimated the total cost of repairs at $25 million, adding that although the building is ready to be reopened now, some repair work will continue until April 2007.

[edit] Commissioner

The current Commissioner of Internal Revenue is Mark W. Everson, who was confirmed by the U.S. Senate on May 1, 2003.

[edit] Tax collection statistics

Summary of Collections before Refunds by Type of Return, Fiscal Year 2003:

Type of Return Number of Returns Gross Collections (Millions of US$)
Individual Income Tax 130,728,360 987,209
Corporate Income Tax 5,890,821 194,146
Employment Taxes 29,916,033 695,976
Gift Tax 287,456 1,939
Excise Taxes 812,483 52,771
Estate Tax 91,679 20,888

In fiscal year 2004, the IRS collected $43.1 billion in enforcement revenue. This is an increase of $5.5 billion (15 percent) from fiscal year 2003.

Recently, the IRS has altered its policies. The current Service plus Enforcement equals Compliance motto has led to more investigations of abusive tax schemes.

As of 2007, the agency estimates it is owed $300 billion more than it collects.[7]

[edit] Outsourcing collections

In September 2006, the IRS started to outsource the collection of taxpayers debts to private debt collection agencies. Opponents to this change note that the IRS will be handing over personal information to these debt collection agencies, who are being paid between twenty-two and twenty-four percent of the amount collected. Opponents are also worried about the agencies' being paid on percent collected because it will encourage the collectors to use pressure tactics to collect the maximum amount. IRS spokesman Terry Lemons responds to these critics saying the new system "is a sound, balanced program that respects taxpayers' rights and taxpayer privacy." Other state and local agencies also use private collection agencies.[8]


[edit] Administrative functions

In addition to collection of revenue and pursuing tax cheaters, the IRS issues administrative rulings such as revenue rulings and private letter rulings. In addition the Service publishes the Internal Revenue Bulletin containing the various IRS pronouncements. The controlling authority of regulations and revenue rulings allows taxpayers to rely on them. A private letter ruling is good for the taxpayer to whom it is issued, and gives some explanation of the Service's position on a particular tax issue. As is the case with all administrative pronouncements, taxpayers sometimes litigate the validity of the pronouncements, and courts sometimes determine a particular rule to be invalid where the agency has exceeded its grant of authority. The IRS also issues formal pronouncements called Revenue Procedures that among other things tell taxpayers how to correct prior tax errors.

More formal rulemaking to give the Service's interpretation of a statute or when the statute itself directs that the Secretary of the Treasury shall provide, IRS undergoes the formal regulation process with an NPRM (Notice of proposed rulemaking) published in the Federal Register announcing the proposed regulation, the date of the in person hearing and the process for interested parties to have their views heard either in person at the hearing in Washington, D.C., or by mail. Following the statutory period provided in the Administrative Procedure Act (an abiding interest of Justice Scalia's dissenting opinions) the Service decides on the final regulations "as is," or as reflecting changes, or sometimes withdraws the proposed regulations. Generally, taxpayers may rely on proposed regulations until final regulations become effective. For example, human resource professionals are relying on the October 4, 2005 Proposed Regulations (citation 70 F.R. 57930-57984)[9] for the Section 409A on deferred compensation (the so-called Enron rules on deferred compensation to add teeth to the old rules) because regulations have not been finalized.

[edit] Criticism

[edit] Legal status and authority

For more details on this topic, see Tax protester statutory arguments.

Many tax protesters claim that because the IRS itself was not created by statute and because the IRS has no legal capacity to sue or be sued,[10] the IRS is not a federal government agency. Some claim it is a Puerto Rican trust.[11] The courts have uniformly rejected such arguments as a basis for not filing a tax return or paying tax.

In another argument, tax protesters claim that IRS employees do not have the authority to assert penalties — basing the argument on Internal Revenue Code section 6020(b)(1) which states:

Authority of Secretary to execute return.
If any person fails to make any return required by any internal revenue law or regulation made thereunder at the time prescribed therefor, or makes, willfully or otherwise, a false or fraudulent return, the Secretary shall make such return from his own knowledge and from such information as he can obtain through testimony or otherwise.

Some protesters contend that this provision shows that IRS agents have no authority to impose penalties unless they have a delegation from the Secretary of the Treasury, although the logic of the argument is unclear given that the function of imposing penalties is a separate function from that of preparing section 6020(b) returns. However, the court has rejected the argument, and ruled that an IRS Revenue Agent "plainly falls" within the cited Treasury regulation.

[edit] Conspiracy theories and allegations

The IRS is often featured in various conspiracy theories. One of the prominent allegation of IRS's insidious conduct is the the movie America: From Freedom to Fascism, directed by Libertarian filmmaker Aaron Russo, that explores the possible plot making United States to become a police state which IRS is allegedly taking part. See also Tax protester conspiracy arguments and Milton William Cooper.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ 26 C.F.R. section 601.101(a) (emphasis added).
  2. ^ Form 1040, Individual Income Tax Return for year 1929, as republished in historical documents section of Publication 1796 (Rev. Feb. 2007), Internal Revenue Service, U.S. Department of the Treasury.
  3. ^ 1953-2 C.B. 443 (Aug. 21, 1953), filed with Division of the Federal Register on Aug. 26, 1953. Compare Treas. Dep't Order 150-29 (July 9, 1953).
  4. ^ Pub. L. No. 105-206, 112 Stat. 685 (July 22, 1998).
  5. ^ IRS flood spurs telecommuting, Computerworld, June 30, 2006
  6. ^ IRS Headquarters Reopens; First Employees Return Today, Internal Revenue Service, December 8, 2006
  7. ^ IRS Commissioner Assailed on 'Tax Gap' by Jack Speer. Morning Edition, National Public Radio, 21 March 2007.
  8. ^ http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060823/ap_on_go_ot/irs_debt_collection_2 D. Caterinicchia, IRS moves ahead on debt-collection plan
  9. ^ Federal Register (Volume 70, Number 191), October 4, 2005
  10. ^ Lawsuits against the U.S. government in the United States Tax Court are generally filed against the "Commissioner of Internal Revenue," not the "Internal Revenue Service". Lawsuits in other federal courts are generally filed against "The United States of America."
  11. ^ Mitchell, Paul. 31 Questions and Answers about the Internal Revenue Service. Supreme Law Library. Retrieved on August 16, 2006.

[edit] Further reading

  • Davis, Shelley L.; Matalin, Mary. Unbridled Power: Inside the Secret Culture of the IRS. New York: Harper Collins. ISBN 0-88730-829-5. 
  • Johnston, David Cay (2003). Perfectly Legal: The Covert Campaign to Rig Our Tax System to Benefit the Super Rich - and Cheat Everybody Else. New York: Portfolio. ISBN 1-59184-019-8. 
  • Rossotti, Charles O. (2005). Many Unhappy Returns: One Man's Quest To Turn Around The Most Unpopular Organization In America. Cambridge: Harvard Business School Press. ISBN 1-59139-441-4. 
  • Roth, William V., Jr.; Nixon, William H. (1999). The Power to Destroy. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press. ISBN 0-87113-748-8. 

[edit] External links

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