IRS Newswire
IR-2005-76
July
25, 2005
IRS
Launches Study of S Corporation Reporting
Compliance
WASHINGTON – Internal Revenue
Service officials announced today the launch of a study to
assess the reporting compliance of S corporations. The study,
carried out under the National Research Program (NRP), will
examine 5,000 randomly selected S corporation returns from tax
years 2003 and 2004.
S corporations are entities whose
income and deductions pass through the corporate structure to
the shareholders. Since the mid-1980s, the number of S
corporations has risen rapidly, growing from 724,749 in 1985
to 3,154,377 in 2002.
The growth rate has been even
faster among S corporations with more than $10 million in
assets. From 1985
to 2002, the number of these larger S corporations grew more
than ten-fold, from 2,305 to 26,096.
“The use of S
corporations has exploded,” said IRS Commissioner Mark W.
Everson. “The IRS needs a better understanding of what this
means for tax compliance. This research is critical for
achieving our strategic goal of ensuring that corporations and
high-income individuals are paying their fair share.”
S corporations are now the most
common corporate entity.
In 2002, the latest year for which data is available, S
corporation returns accounted for 59 percent of all corporate
returns filed for that tax year. Two million S corporations
reported net income of about $248 billion and 1.2 million S
corporations reported net losses of about $63
billion.
Numerous restrictions and
requirements apply to S corporations. For example, an S
corporation can have no more than 75 shareholders and none of
these can be another corporation or non-resident alien.
Program officials expect these
audits to begin later this year. The last reporting compliance
study of S corporations involved about 10,000 returns from tax
year 1984, prior to the tax law changes that spurred the
growth in S corporations. The new NRP initiative will use a
study approach designed to reach statistically valid
conclusions regarding compliance behavior, while using a
smaller sample of returns than in the
past.
The results of the NRP study will
be used to more accurately gauge the extent to which the
income, deductions and credits from S corporations are
properly reported on returns filed by the flow through
corporations and their shareholders. When completed, this
research will assist the IRS in selecting and auditing S
corporation returns with greater compliance risk.
The research program on S
corporations is a complement to the study of individual
reporting compliance completed last year. The preliminary
results from that study, announced in March, indicated that
the gross tax gap is more than $300 billion each year. IRS collection and
compliance efforts reduce this gap by about $50 billion each
year.
The NRP, created in 2000, is a
comprehensive effort by the IRS to measure payment, filing and
reporting compliance for different types of taxes and various
set of taxpayers.
Administering a tax system that
serves America’s taxpayers by promoting fairness and operating
efficiency and effectiveness is dependent on the agency’s
ability to measure and distinguish between the many factors
that impact compliance with tax laws.
“This research effort provides us
the knowledge we need to both improve compliance and reduce
unnecessary taxpayer burden,” said Everson.
Without reliable measures, the IRS
faces major challenges in enhancing its ability to detect
noncompliance, improve overall compliance and develop methods
for allocating resources more effectively.
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