IRS says audit rates have grown for the wealthy

By Alan Fram Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) -- If you earn less than $200,000 a year, there's a strong chance you don't have to worry about an Internal Revenue Service audit. But if you make more than $1 million annually, the odds have been rising that you'll be hearing from the tax man. The IRS released figures last Thursday showing that 12 percent of millionaire earners were audited last year. That's up from 8 percent in 2010 and 6 percent in 2009. The data shows that for those making under $200,000, the rate has stayed steady at around 1 percent in recent years. IRS officials said the growing audit rate for high earners is aimed at demonstrating that the tax code is being enforced fairly and is unrelated to President Barack Obama's recent proposals to boost taxes on the rich. The White House and congressional Democrats are expected to continue taking similar populist stances with the approach of this November's presidential and congressional elections. Steven Miller, deputy IRS commissioner for services and enforcement, said in an interview that the higher audit rates for the highest earning individuals are designed to "assure that those at the lower end of the spectrum know that those at the higher end of the spectrum are subject to the same rules and enforcement as everyone else." "We base our audit decisions on tax issues, nothing else," said IRS spokeswoman Michelle Eldridge. "We don't play politics here." Four percent of individuals earning $200,000 and up were audited in 2011, up from around 3 percent the previous five years. The IRS only provided data for three categories of individuals' income: those earning under $200,000 annually, those making $200,000 and up and those earning $1 million and up. Overall, the agency says, it audited nearly 1.6 million of 141 million individual returns in 2011, or just over 1 percent. That rate has been growing gradually and is almost double the 0.6 percent audited in 2001, the IRS said. Only about a quarter of IRS' audits involve dreaded meetings between taxpayers and agency officials. The rest are carried out using letters. In 2010 -- the most recent year available -- more than 8 in 10 individuals audited ended up paying additional taxes. Altogether, IRS enforcement efforts -- including audits, legal action and other tactics -- resulted in an extra $55 billion being collected. That's down almost $3 billion from 2010, which Miller blamed on a falloff in estate taxes and corporations writing off their losses. That $55 billion was a small part of the $2.3 trillion the agency collected in revenue last year. The IRS also audited a greater proportion of large corporations than smaller ones, the data shows. Last year, 1 percent of corporations with assets under $10 million were audited. Among corporations with assets of $250 million and up, 28 percent were audited. The IRS figures also showed that: -- In 2011, the agency garnished wages or seized money from bank accounts 3.7 million times, put liens on property 1 million times and seized 776 pieces of property. -- Seventy-seven percent of individual returns were filed electronically last year, up from 69 percent in 2010. -- Seventy percent of callers to IRS taxpayer information telephone lines got through, slightly less than the 74 percent who reached someone in 2010. Miller attributed that to budget cuts to the agency. -- The information IRS officials dispensed over the phone to taxpayers was accurate 93 percent of the time, the same as the previous year. -- The IRS website, http://www.irs.gov, was visited 319 million times in 2011, a slight increase. The data was presented by federal fiscal years, which begin on the previous Oct. 1. Published: Mon, Jan 9, 2012