'Such nonsense’: Former IRS commissioner rebuffs claims about armed tax agents

Charles O. Rossotti, former IRS commissioner, joins Yahoo Finance Live to explain the new IRS funding bill and distinguishes fact from fiction about its key components.

Video Transcript

[AUDIO LOGO]

- The IRS is speaking out on recent criticism. It's getting the $80 billion in new funding it received as part of the Inflation Reduction Act. IRS commissioner Chuck Rettig published an op-ed this morning on Yahoo Finance, debunking lingering misperceptions about how this money is going to be used. Here to discuss, we've got former IRS Commissioner Charles Rossotti. Charles, thanks so much for taking the time here with us this morning.

CHARLES ROSSOTTI: Glad to be here. Thank you.

- Certainly. First and foremost, when we think about this funding and how it's going to be put to use, it was the clarification that was provided about where the new hires would be, what they would be doing as well as part of the operations. We do understand that the IRS has been incredibly behind in even processing some tax returns. How much might this be able to bring them up to speed on that front?

CHARLES ROSSOTTI: OK, so I think that's a good place to start because before you can talk about what needs to be done, you've got to talk about where they are now. And I went back and looked at the time when I was commissioner starting in 1997, so let's say 25 years ago. And the IRS's total budget today is less than half, half in relation to the size of the economy. That was back then 25 years ago.

And in the meantime, the Congress has passed all manner of laws that it assigns the IRS to administer, ranging from a part of the healthcare system, major thing, all the pandemic relief, even tracking down terrorists after 9/11. All of that has been added while the budget has been cut in half. So you have a depleted agency.

What I think this money will do is partially restore the agency over a 10-year period to where it was, provided it uses the money to be more efficient as well. And I think the top priority actually, the first priority that's going to be done the quickest is to just get service back because the IRS, as you probably know, deals with every family and every business in America, most of it's routine. But people sometimes in that complicated system need to egg a question answered, get an error corrected. And right now that's a really, really sad situation.

I mean, the IRS is answering probably maybe 10% of the phone calls that it gets, and the backlog is huge. And the technology is out of date compared to what you get in your average bank account. So these are the first priorities, and then the longer term, of course, is to cut into some of that unpaid taxes that is mostly on the upper income brackets.