The U.S. Senate Republican Policy Committee (RPC) released a paper titled, "Private Collection Agencies: Addressing a Piece of the Tax Pie" on Nov. 15. The Executive Summary is printed below.
This paper can also be found at http://www.rpc.senate.gov, and in the RPC office, 347 Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C.
The tax gap is the difference between the taxes that should have been paid on time and the amount actually paid in a specific tax year. The net tax gap, which is computed by subtracting late payments from the overall tax gap, is estimated to be $290 billion.
Discussions about long-term tax reform are essential; however, Congress should not overlook any immediate options that will raise revenues without raising taxes. One option is to use private collection agencies (PCAs) to assist the IRS in its tax collection efforts, a program that Congress authorized in 2004 and which is being implemented by the IRS.
The purpose of the PCA program is twofold: (1) to help reduce the significant and growing number of resolvable but uncollected cases; and (2) to enable the IRS to focus its existing resources more efficiently on the difficult cases.
The concerns raised about the PCA program have all been addressed in the program's design.
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