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New IRS hires will boost enforcement

Tracey Samuelson May 5, 2016
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The IRS has been down 15,000 employees since 2010. ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP/Getty Images

New IRS hires will boost enforcement

Tracey Samuelson May 5, 2016
The IRS has been down 15,000 employees since 2010. ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP/Getty Images
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Looking for a new job? How about the Internal Revenue Service?

The IRS has announced it’ll hire 600 to 700 new employees, focusing primarily on enforcement — the first significant hiring in that area in five years.

The positions are sorely needed, said IRS Commissioner John Koskinen.

Overall, the agency’s down 15,000 employees since 2010.

“It doesn’t mean we’re growing, it just means we’re shrinking at a slower rate,” he said. “At some point, the agency just can’t continue to shrink without losing its effectiveness. It’s become an increasingly high priority for us.”

The IRS has already recently hired 1,000 employees in its wage and income division after Congress approved $290 million specifically targeted toward identity theft, cyber security, and  improving taxpayer service.

Due to budget cuts — $900 million since 2010 — the agency has generally been unable to replace employees who leave. Even with the new hires, it will likely end the year with 2,000 fewer employees than it had at the beginning of the year. Those shortages have a cost.

“We estimate that the government is losing $4 billion to $5 billion a year in collections we’re not making because we don’t have enough people,” Koskinen said.

The agency is also suffering from what Koskinen refers to as a “baby bust.” Fewer than 250 of the agencies’ 85,000 employees are under the age of 25;  fewer than 2,000 are under the age of 30.

New hires will initially be directed at the enforcement of small business and self-employed individuals, as those tend to be entry-level positions.

Given the complicated nature of taxes, there are no quick fixes to the IRS’s staffing problems, said Steve Rosenthal, a senior fellow at the Tax Policy Center.

“New employees are not going to able to hit the ground running,” enforcing tax rules or helping taxpayers, he said. “It takes a lot of training for them to get to that level.”

He said the new hires are a step in the right direction, but lots more are needed. 

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