WASHINGTON – Sen. Chuck Grassley
(R-Iowa), former chairman and current member of the Finance Committee, joined
Finance Committee Ranking Member Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) and his Republican
colleagues to
urge
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Commissioner Chuck Rettig to implement 2-D
barcoding for paper returns in the 2023 tax filing season – technology that
would help to efficiently process millions of tax returns and speed up taxpayer
refunds.
Processing paper returns is a tedious,
time-consuming process, and the pandemic led to an unprecedented backlog of
paper returns at the IRS. As the
senators note in the letter, “For taxpayers due a refund, an IRS backlog
means refund delays and possible financial hardship. For others, the backlog means the
unavailability of tax transcripts necessary to secure a loan or employment.”
In March, the National Taxpayer Advocate
(NTA) recommended the IRS implement 2-D barcoding for paper tax returns, which
would concisely encode relevant data and import it in digital form into the
IRS’s computer systems, bypassing time-consuming manual data entry and
streamlining the process. However, the IRS has signaled it is unlikely to do
so.
In the
letter,
the senators make several arguments in favor of implementing 2-D barcoding:
- Millions of taxpayers need their refunds. 2-D barcoding will help efficiently process
millions of tax returns and speed up taxpayer refunds.
- It is affordable and the IRS has the funds. The American
Rescue Plan of 2021 earmarked $1.86 billion toward the IRS to, among other
things, provide taxpayer assistance, including $1 billion specifically for IT
modernization. Entering into 2022, only $98.5 million of the $1 billion was
spent. In 2017, the IRS estimated the cost for implementing 2-D barcoding
technology was $8.3 million.
- There is an urgent need to address the problem
now, not in five years.
- Stop chasing technological perfection. If we were to wait for the promise of better
technology, nothing would ever get implemented. 2-D technology has been tested
and is less expensive, and many states currently use it.
- 2-D barcoding will likely pay for itself. Faster processing means faster refunds. The
result will be improved taxpayer outcomes and a reduction in the billions of
dollars the IRS pays in interest.
Full text of the letter is available
HERE.
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