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October 1, 2019


Internal Revenue Service Appropriations, FY2020


Overview
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has two primary
statutory responsibilities: (1) to collect most of the revenue
required to fund the federal government and a variety of
discretionary programs, and (2) to enforce taxpayer
compliance with federal tax laws and regulations. In
FY2018, the agency processed 250.3 million tax and
information returns (not including Form 1099 returns) and
collected $3.5 trillion in gross revenue.

Appropriations provide the vast share of operating funds for
the IRS. In FY2018, 93% ($11.4 billion) of its budget came
from appropriations. The remaining 7% ($850 million)
stemmed from several sources, over which the IRS has
unlimited authority regarding the use of the funds:
reimbursements from other government agencies for
services rendered by the IRS, offsetting collections, user
fees, and carryovers of unobligated balances from previous
years.

Historically, IRS's appropriated funds have been distributed
among four accounts: taxpayer services (TS), enforcement,
operations support (OS), and business systems
modernization (BSM). As Table 1 shows, enforcement
represented 43% of the $11.303 billion in enacted
appropriations for FY2019, followed by OS (33%), TS
(22%), and BSM (1%). Congress included another $77
million in FY2019 to allow the IRS to continue
implementing the many changes to the federal tax code
made in 2017 by P.L. 115-97.

The Trump Administration is asking for $11.472 billion in
appropriations for the IRS in FY2020, or $169 million more
than the enacted amount for FY2019. This increase is the
net result of cost savings from several efficiency measures
and the discontinuation of the $77 million in funding for
implementing the provisions of P.L. 115-97, and added
spending of $180 million for the BSM program, $34 million
for enhanced data analytics, $22.5 million for identity theft
prevention, and $107 million for cybersecurity
enhancement and maintaining and upgrading IRS's
information systems.

In addition, the Administration is proposing additional
funding in FY2020 for enforcement activities ($200
million) and operations support ($162 million) through a
program integrity cap adjustment under Section 251 (b)(2)
of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act
of 1985 (BBEDCA; P.L. 99-177). Congress would have to
approve the adjustments before the associated funds could
be spent. The added funds, along with proposed cap
adjustments in future years, would be used to pay for
continuing investments in expanding and improving the
effectiveness and efficiency of the IRS's overall tax


enforcement program. According to IRS budget
documents, these investments would result in an estimated
gross revenue gain of $47.1 billion over 10 years, at a total
cost of $14.5 billion, yielding a net revenue gain of $32.6
billion. This estimate does reflect the revenue effects of
added enforcement initiatives on taxpayer noncompliance.

Table I. IRS's FY2019 and FY2020 Appropriations,
Excluding Nonappropriated Funds
(millions of dollars)

                                     FY2020
                FY2019    FY2020      H.R.     FY2020
   Account      Enacted   Request    3351 a    S. 2524b

 Taxpayer        $2,492     $2,402    $2,559     $2,482
 Services
 Enforcement      4,860     4,705c    4,957d      5,060
 Operations       3,724     4,075e     3,794f     3,722
 Support
 Business           150       290        290        150
 Systems
 Modernization
 Administrative      77        -          -         -
 Provision
 Total          $11,303   $11,472   $12,000    $11,414
 Sources: IRS's FY2020 Budget Justification and House
Appropriations Committee report on H.R. 3351 (H.Rept. 116-122)
and Senate Appropriations Committee report on S. 2524 (S.Rept.
116-111).
a.  As passed by the House.
b. As reported by the Senate Appropriations Committee.
c.  Excludes Program Integrity Cap increase of $199.9 million.
d.  Excludes Program Integrity Cap increase of $200 million.
e.  Excludes Program Integrity Cap increase of $162 million.
f.  Excludes Program Integrity Cap increase of $200 million.

Individual Appropriations Accounts

Taxpayer Services
The Administration's FY2020 budget request includes
$2.402 billion for TS. Of the requested amount, $8.9
million would be set aside for the Tax Counseling for the
Elderly Program (TCEP), $12.0 million for low-income
taxpayer clinic grants, $15.0 million for matching grants
under the Community Volunteer Income Tax Assistance
(VITA) program (available until September 30, 2021), and
$206 million for the Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS),
with $5 million designated for cases involving taxpayer
identity theft.


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