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IRS Delays Audits In Tax Havens E-mail
Friday, 01 June 2007

Rabb.jul06 by Harry Rabb, C.P.A.

Special to Tropical Breeze

The Internal Revenue Service is curtailing audits of many people who use offshore tax havens, even when agents see signs of tax evasion, because agents fear they cannot meet a three-year deadline for finishing an examination, Congressional investigators have found.

In a report to be released by the Government Accountability Office (GAO), it was found that IRS agents are so hobbled by “dilatory tactics” by offshore taxpayers and other problems that it takes almost two and a half years to complete a typical audit. Many IRS agents told the GAO, the investigative arm of Congress, that the “safest way” was often to stop an audit prematurely and sometimes to refrain from starting one in the first place.

The IRS reported that almost $300 billion in investment and business income was moved out of the U.S. in 2003, the most recent year for which data was fully available. Analysts at the Joint Committee on Taxation have estimated that the annual outflow has shot to more than $400 billion since then.

Of that, a portion went to tax havens that impose few taxes of their own and provide little information to authorities in the U.S. The other went to countries with tax treaties and agreements to exchange financial data with the U.S. The report did not provide a breakdown of how much money went to specific countries.

Even so, the GAO found that the average audit of people with money offshore turned up twice as much in unpaid taxes — about $5,800 — than audits of money kept inside the U.S. The average assessment of unpaid taxes tripled to $17,500 for the limited number of audits that were allowed to run longer than three years, and it shot up to nearly $100,000 for the small number allowed to run four or five years.

The new report was requested by the Senate Finance Committee, where Democrats and Republicans alike are looking for more ways to crack down on people who move their profits overseas.

The IRS has estimated that the government loses about $300 billion a year from companies and people who underreport incomes. While much of that so-called tax gap stems from people inside the country, often self-employed people or family-owned businesses, majority party lawmakers contend that the government could be losing tens of billions of dollars a year from offshore tax evasion.

Tax analysts say it is almost impossible to know with certainty how much the government is losing from international tax evasion. It is, however, estimated to be in the billions.

The IRS’s estimates of money moved offshore are based on transfers that are reported by financial institutions like banks and investment firms that handle such transactions.

But those estimates leave out at least two potentially big pots of taxable income: transfers of money that are not reported to the government and overseas profits made by Americans on money that is already outside the country.

Experts have estimated last year that the U.S. could be losing as much as $50 billion from international tax maneuvering. They have based their estimates on calculations by the Boston Consulting Group that residents of the U.S. — individuals as well as corporations — are holding about $1.5 trillion outside the country. If that money produced a 10 percent return, he said, the U.S. might be failing to collect taxes on about $150 billion a year.

The new GAO report focuses on the narrower issue of auditing people who move money out of the U.S. each year. It reported that offshore audits routinely become bogged down by stalling tactics by taxpayers, difficulties in getting financial information from foreign institutions and the technical complexity of many offshore transactions.

As part of its inquiry, the GAO examined 12 offshore tax audits. In one case, which the GAO said typified the obstacles, the IRS spent four years investigating a person with businesses in both the U.S. and an unnamed overseas tax haven. It was reported that the investigation included 20 summonses, 23 demands for documents, 5 missed appointments and 2 refusals by the person being investigated to supply information. After four years, the government still did not know how much money had been moved to the tax haven.

Audits can be pursued for more than three years, especially when fraud is suspected, but agents have to meet tough requirements and their findings can be dismissed and the agents reprimanded if the unpaid taxes turn out to be smaller than expected. Revenue agents and managers have told the GAO that some developed cases are not opened for examinations because insufficient time remains under the statute. Many case files that are prepared for an audit, it said, are instead “surveyed” and closed.

The three-year deadline creates an even bigger problem, the GAO said, by making it even harder to recover money from previous years after auditors find that a person underreported income in the most recent year.

The so-called tax gap continues to be a problem but it appears that Congress has finally identified a large problem – offshore tax havens where otherwise taxable dollars are sheltered by Americans with foreign government assistance.

• • •

This information is provided as a public service and should not be construed as individual accounting or tax planning advice. For information on how these general principles apply to your situation, please consult an accounting or tax professional.

Harry Rabb is a C.P.A. and owner of Accounting Services, Inc., 935 Main Street, Suite D-1, Safety Harbor. Call 727-725-4121.

 
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