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GAO-08-800R 1 (2008-06-05)

handle is hein.gao/gaocrptawth0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 



  a GAO

       Accountability * Integrity * Reliability
United States Government Accountability Office
Washington, DC 20548



    June 5, 2008

    The Honorable John Lewis
    Chairman
    Subcommittee on Oversight
    Committee on Ways and Means
    House of Representatives

    Subject: Refund Anticipation Loans

    Dear Mr. Chairman:

    Taxpayers who do not want to wait for their tax refunds from the Internal Revenue Service
    (IRS) may choose to obtain refund anticipation loans (RAL). RALs are short-term, high-
    interest bank loans that are advertised and brokered by both national chain and local tax
    preparation companies. Although the annual percentage rate (APR) on RALs can be over
    500 percent,' they allow taxpayers to receive cash refunds quickly-sometimes within the
    same day and even within an hour of filing their tax returns. After filing a taxpayer's return
    electronically, the tax preparer works in cooperation with a bank to advance the refund as
    a loan minus tax preparation costs, other fees, and a finance charge. As part of the RAL
    process, the taxpayer provides authorization to IRS to send the refund directly to the bank
    to repay the loan.

    Despite the benefits of receiving cash quickly based on an expected refund, IRS officials
    and others have raised concerns about whether taxpayers are fully aware of the costs
    involved and their tax filing alternatives. For example, in a 2007 report to Congress, the IRS
    National Taxpayer Advocate questioned whether RAL consumers actually understand the
    nature of the loan product they are receiving. According to the Advocate, while tax
    preparers offering RALs are required to obtain taxpayers' signatures on written disclosure
    forms, there are no requirements that such disclosures be made orally. The Advocate wrote
    that despite the written disclosures provided to them, consumers may not fully understand
    that the RAL is in fact a loan and not simply a way to receive a faster refund from IRS.
    Further, without an oral explanation, consumers may lack a general understanding of the
    nature of the product and its impact on credit reports, as well as other consequences of
    default. In January 2008, in order to address this issue, IRS and the Department of the
    Treasury (Treasury) indicated in a Federal Register notice that they were considering rules
    to prohibit tax preparers from marketing RALs based on information gathered during the
    tax preparation process. In their notice, IRS and Treasury cite concerns about tax preparers
    improperly inflating refunds in order to market RALs, particularly when working with

    'At the tax preparers we visited, we found APRs ranging from 36% to over 500%.


GAO-08-800R Refund Anticipation Loans


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