Showing posts with label mailing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mailing. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

IRS Needs to Better Manage Mailing Costs

The IRS stopped mailing out tax forms this year in response to budget cuts,but according to a new government report the agency still needs to work on a long-term strategy for reducing mailing costs.

Accounting Today reports:

    The Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration noted that that in response to cost savings proposed in its fiscal year 2011 budget request, the IRS formed task forces and recommended several actions to identify ways to achieve cost savings. However, the task force proposal did not include documentation to show the methodology used to make the proposals, how the estimates were calculated or validated, or how the IRS would measure the results or the cost savings of the proposals.

    The task force believed that reducing the mailings of forms instead of eliminating them was a more cautious approach, affecting fewer taxpayers in the short term. Nevertheless, IRS executives decided to eliminate all mailings of tax packages for the U.S. individual income tax return (Form 1040), partnerships, and corporations in fiscal year 2011 in order to meet the cost savings presented in the FY 2011 budget request. But the report noted that this move could increase the IRS’s burden and reduce compliance for those taxpayers who rely on receiving these packages by mail.

    As the IRS moves forward with the proposed cost savings or pursues other methods of saving publishing and mail costs, it needs to implement sufficient controls and procedures to ensure the decisions are documented and that the data used are accurate and complete, the report noted. In addition, these controls should be part of a long-term strategy to continually assess publishing and mail costs and identify opportunities for cost reductions and efficiencies.

More here...

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

IRS: No More Tax Forms In The Mailbox

From CNNMoney.com:

Electronic filing of tax returns has become so popular that the Internal Revenue Service will no longer automatically mail a traditional paper form.

"We're finding that more and more people are choosing to e-file, and the number of paper returns is going down," said IRS spokesman Anthony Burke. He told CNN Tuesday that the agency last year mailed the old-style set of paper forms, tables and instructions to just eight percent of the nation's taxpayers.

Burke said 96 million taxpayers this year have filed electronically, with another 20 million filing through professional tax preparers. The IRS hopes to save $10 million a year by not automatically mailing the materials.

Those who prefer hardcopy documents can still find them at libraries, post offices and walk-in IRS offices around the country. After Jan. 1, they can request a mailing through the IRS toll-free number, 800-829-3676.

The materials will also be available to download and print out from the IRS website: www.irs.gov

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