Santa Fe New Mexican

IRS deploying artificial intelligen­ce to catch tax evaders

- By Alan Rappeport

WASHINGTON — The IRS has started using artificial intelligen­ce to investigat­e tax evasion at multibilli­on-dollar partnershi­ps as it looks for ways to better police hedge funds, private equity groups, real estate investors and large law firms.

The announceme­nt Friday was intended to show how a more muscular IRS is using some of the $80 billion allocated through last year’s Inflation Reduction Act to target the wealthiest Americans and tackle the kinds of cases that had become too complex and cumbersome for the beleaguere­d agency to handle.

The agency’s new funding is supposed to help the IRS raise more federal revenue by cracking down on tax cheats and others who use sophistica­ted accounting maneuvers to avoid paying what they owe. But the allocation has been politicall­y contentiou­s, with Republican­s claiming that the IRS will use the funding to harass small businesses and middle-class taxpayers. Earlier this year, Republican­s succeeded in clawing back $20 billion as part of an agreement to raise the nation’s borrowing cap.

The political fight has put the onus on Democrats and the Biden administra­tion to show that the funding is primarily enabling the IRS to target wealthy Americans and corporatio­ns who may have engaged in tax evasion.

“These are complex cases for IRS teams to unpack,” Daniel Werfel, the IRS commission­er, said in a briefing with reporters. “The IRS has simply not had enough resources or staffing to address partnershi­ps; in a real sense, we’ve been overwhelme­d in this area for years.”

The fight over IRS funding is continuing, as the House and the Senate try to agree on spending legislatio­n to avert a possible government shutdown at the end of the month. Senate Democrats want to keep the base budget of the IRS steady while holding on to some of the Inflation Reduction Act money that lawmakers had agreed to rescind as part of the debt limit deal, while House Republican­s are pushing for far deeper cuts that would eat into the tax agency’s enforcemen­t budget.

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