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Been audited lately? Blame the IRS' data warehouse

The IRS has become markedly better at spotting potential tax fraud and more aggressive in pursuing it


As April 15 looms and tax season starts entering its frenzied home stretch, individuals and corporate accountants contemplating their tax return may find themselves wondering just how much they can, let us say, fudge the numbers.

Don't be tempted. In recent years, the IRS has become markedly better at spotting potential tax fraud, and more aggressive in pursuing it.

In 2006, the agency collected a record $59.2 billion via 1.4 million audits. Revenue has grown the last seven years, and is up 75 percent since 2000.

In particular, the IRS has increased its targeting of tax cheats in the middle-class (between $25,000 and $100,000 in annual income) and super-rich (greater than $1 million a year) brackets. It audited 436,000 middle-class households and individuals in 2006, three times as many as in 2000. The chances of being audited rose commensurately , to 1 in 140 in 2006 from 1 in 377 six years earlier, according to the New York Times .

Meanwhile, the above-$1 million club faced a 1-in-11 chance of an audit in 2006, up from 1 in 20 three years earlier (PDF ).

All the while, the IRS has been able to steadily reduce the number of audits of honest taxpayers, according to Jeff Butler, director of research databases for the IRS.

Butler oversees the IRS' research data warehouse, key to the agency's recent improvements.

"What we do is, in some respects, cutting-edge," said Butler, with the restrained pride of a longtime bureaucrat (he's been at the IRS for a total of 15 years, with an additional five-year stint at the Department of Transportation). "We're getting to be as sophisticated as the largest credit card companies or banks."

A world-class data setup
He may be too modest. Unifying all tax returns and related information from the past 10 years, the 150TB Compliance Data Warehouse is comparable in size with the largest known databases in the world, such as ones run by YouTube, AT&T, the CIA, and others.

It's not just the CDW's size that impresses, but its capabilities. IRS researchers can use it to "search and analyze hundreds of millions or even billions of records at a time, so we can answer questions, look at trends, do simulations, and optimization modeling," Butler said. And those analyses, rather than taking weeks or months as they would have in the past, now take hours or days, he said.

Using the CDW, the IRS was able to discover areas where tax cheating had become rampant, such as the Earned Income Tax Credit, or small-business tax shelters, Butler said.

Researchers have also used the CDW to discover or confirm who is at risk for falling behind on their tax payments (young graduates laden with college debt, for instance, are particularly susceptible).

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