Apple Inc
AAPL
$141.61
(+1.93%)
Alphabet Inc - Class C
GOOG
$2,279.07
(+4.47%)
Alphabet Inc - Class A
GOOGL
$2,266.72
(+4.23%)
Amazon.com Inc.
AMZN
$113.51
(+3.55%)
Microsoft Corporation
MSFT
$262.91
(+1.28%)
Meta Platforms Inc - Class A
FB
$196.64
(+0.51%)
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. - Class B
BRK.B
$275.69
(-0.65%)
Alibaba Group Holding Ltd - ADR
BABA
$120.13
(+3.56%)
JPMorgan Chase & Co.
JPM
$112.62
(-1.25%)
Johnson & Johnson
JNJ
$178.14
(-0.77%)
Bank Of America Corp.
BAC
$31.24
(-1.01%)
Exxon Mobil Corp.
XOM
$84.81
(-3.13%)
Wells Fargo & Co.
WFC
$40.10
(+0.45%)
Visa Inc - Class A
V
$200.54
(+0.68%)
Walmart Inc
WMT
$124.25
(+1.32%)
Shell Plc - ADR
RDS.B
$51.06
(0%)
Shell Plc - ADR (Representing Ordinary Shares - Class A)
RDS.A
$51.04
(0%)
Intel Corp.
INTC
$36.72
(+1.05%)
AT&T, Inc.
T
$21.17
(-0.66%)
Unitedhealth Group Inc
UNH
$505.24
(-2.35%)
Cisco Systems, Inc.
CSCO
$41.97
(-1.48%)
PetroChina Co. Ltd. - ADR
PTR
$44.47
(-6.08%)
Novartis AG - ADR
NVS
$84.28
(-0.1%)
Pfizer Inc.
PFE
$51.64
(-1.28%)
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing - ADR
TSM
$76.11
(-1.16%)
Toyota Motor Corporation - ADR
TM
$154.67
(-0.52%)
Home Depot, Inc.
HD
$283.73
(+1.67%)
Oracle Corp.
ORCL
$71.99
(+1.58%)
Boeing Co.
BA
$137.70
(-1.53%)
Procter & Gamble Co.
PG
$144.70
(-0.97%)
Verizon Communications Inc
VZ
$51.42
(-0.43%)
Citigroup Inc
C
$46.61
(-0.56%)
HSBC Holdings plc - ADR
HSBC
$31.61
(-3.27%)
China Mobile Limited - ADR
CHL
$27.51
(0%)
Coca-Cola Co
KO
$63.28
(-1.71%)
Anheuser-Busch In Bev SA/NV - ADR
BUD
$54.63
(-0.82%)
Mastercard Incorporated - Class A
MA
$319.26
(+0.32%)
Abbvie Inc
ABBV
$153.93
(+0.09%)
Comcast Corp - Class A
CMCSA
$39.83
(-1.14%)
Philip Morris International Inc
PM
$98.08
(-1.65%)
Walt Disney Co (The)
DIS
$97.18
(+1.08%)
PepsiCo Inc
PEP
$169.04
(-0.21%)
Unilever NV
UN
$60.50
(0%)
Unilever plc - ADR
UL
$45.84
(-0.97%)
Merck & Co Inc
MRK
$92.64
(+0.24%)
NVIDIA Corp
NVDA
$149.66
(+3.05%)
International Business Machines Corp.
IBM
$137.62
(-2.48%)
3M Co.
MMM
$129.21
(+0.56%)
No Result
View All Result
The New York Ledger
  • Home
  • News

    Boris Johnson on the brink after Rishi Sunak and Sajid Javid quit UK cabinet

    France repatriates children and mothers from Syrian camps

    Alternate-Side Parking Is Back in Full Force: ‘It’s a Pain in the Neck’

    Israel needs to break the cycle of elections

    After Another Mass Shooting, New Jersey Tightens Gun Laws

    Chicago suburb officials say gunman had been planning massacre ‘for several weeks’

    Trending Tags

    • general news
    • Risk News
    • Political/General News
    • industrial news
    • Travel
    • Financial Crime
    • business
    • consumer services
  • Spotlight
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Markets
  • Companies
  • Tech
  • Climate
  • Lifestyle
Subscribe
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News

    Boris Johnson on the brink after Rishi Sunak and Sajid Javid quit UK cabinet

    France repatriates children and mothers from Syrian camps

    Alternate-Side Parking Is Back in Full Force: ‘It’s a Pain in the Neck’

    Israel needs to break the cycle of elections

    After Another Mass Shooting, New Jersey Tightens Gun Laws

    Chicago suburb officials say gunman had been planning massacre ‘for several weeks’

    Trending Tags

    • general news
    • Risk News
    • Political/General News
    • industrial news
    • Travel
    • Financial Crime
    • business
    • consumer services
  • Spotlight
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Markets
  • Companies
  • Tech
  • Climate
  • Lifestyle
Subscribe
  • Login
The New York Ledger
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

The I.R.S. backlog of unprocessed tax returns has grown to 21 million.

June 23, 2022
in Business
A A
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

WASHINGTON — The backlog of tax returns at the Internal Revenue Service has grown to more than 20 million in the last year despite efforts by the Biden administration to process filings and send out refunds more quickly, the national taxpayer advocate said in a report published on Wednesday.

The report offers a critical assessment of the Biden administration’s handling of the I.R.S., which has been burdened by staffing and funding shortages in recent years while taking on the responsibility of delivering economic relief money during the pandemic.

The tax agency’s independent watchdog said the I.R.S. was slow to use relief funds that it received as part of the $1.9 trillion stimulus package that Congress passed in March 2021. It said the agency should have moved more quickly to ramp up hiring, reassign employees and make technology changes that could have eased the backlog.

“That the backlog continues to grow is deeply concerning, primarily because millions of taxpayers have been waiting six months or more to receive their refunds,” Erin M. Collins, the national taxpayer advocate, wrote in the report.

A year ago, the I.R.S. had 20 million unprocessed tax returns. That backlog had grown to 21.3 million as of the last week of May.

The I.R.S. disputed the taxpayer advocate’s findings and said more recent data, through June 10, showed unprocessed returns had dipped below 20 million and were down slightly from June 2021.

“The I.R.S. is committed to having healthy inventories by the end of this year and continues to make strong progress handling unprocessed tax returns,” Jodie Reynolds, an I.R.S. representative, said in a statement.

Paper tax returns continue to bog down the I.R.S. as the documents must be manually transcribed into its antiquated computer systems.

Communication is also a major obstacle, Ms. Collins said, with taxpayers seeking to reach customer service agents on the telephone waiting on hold for an average of 29 minutes. Just 10 percent of the 73 million calls that the I.R.S. received were answered by an agent. On both counts, those metrics are worse than last year.

The Biden administration has been calling for more resources for the I.R.S. and asked for $80 billion over a decade to overhaul its technology and bolster its staff. Democrats have pinned blame for the agency’s problems on Republicans, who have long tried to starve it of funding and accused it of political bias against conservatives.

The Treasury Department, which oversees the I.R.S., said on Tuesday that the agency expected to soon finish processing all individual tax returns without errors that were received last year, with business returns filed in 2021 completed “shortly thereafter.” A senior Treasury official noted that the I.R.S. had already been stepping up hiring and had diverted employees to help clear the backlog.

The I.R.S. has struggled to hire staff even when it has the funding to do so. The report noted that the agency had set a goal of hiring 5,473 people in its submission processing facilities this year but had hired only 2,056 so far.

For taxpayers, the dysfunction at the I.R.S. has led to mounting frustration as they await refunds at a time of soaring inflation.

Ms. Collins estimated that nine million taxpayers were experiencing refund delays. More than 300,000 who have been victims of identify theft will have to wait at least a year.

The taxpayer advocate suggested that the I.R.S. work to automate the processing of paper tax returns and make it easier for taxpayers to file electronically. Ensuring that phones are answered should also be a priority.

“If a private company failed to answer nine out of 10 customer calls, customers would go elsewhere,” Ms. Collins said. “That, of course, is not an option for U.S. taxpayers, so it is critical that the I.R.S. increase staffing in its telephone call centers to handle the volume of calls it receives.”

Source: NY Times

ADVERTISEMENT

Related Posts

Business

In a big potential breach, a hacker offers to sell a Chinese police database.

Business

A former employee of Archegos, the collapsed hedge fund, sues for millions in lost pay.

Business

Judge Clears Distributors of Blame for Opioid Crisis in Hard Hit County

Business

The euro hits a 20-year low against the dollar as markets slide on economic fears.

Business

Ford quarterly sales were up slightly from last year, when chip shortages hurt output.

Business

Twitter, Challenging Orders to Remove Content, Sues India’s Government

Business

A Poor Country Made Bitcoin a National Currency. The Bet Isn’t Paying Off.

Business

Crypto Crashed. Wall Street Won.

Business

SAS, the Scandinavian airline, files for bankruptcy protection after pilots strike.

Popular News

  • DOJ’s big crypto crackdown

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • This $20 Device Turns a Handgun Into an Automatic Weapon

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Brussels pushes for tougher sanctions enforcement via EU-wide body

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Humanities degrees: ave atque vale

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • KPMG’s business in UAE split by partner infighting and coup attempt

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Latest News

Politics

DC public schools hosts racially segregated ‘affinity groups’ for staff

News

Boris Johnson on the brink after Rishi Sunak and Sajid Javid quit UK cabinet

Companies

CureVac sues BioNTech over mRNA patents

Markets

Norway government halts oil and gas strike

About Us

The New York Ledger is an online newspaper for cosmopolitans, global entrepreneurs, management staff, influencers, and other modern leaders who care about wider aspects and broader opinions.

Category

  • Business
  • Climate
  • Companies
  • Lifestyle
  • Markets
  • News
  • Politics
  • Spotlight
  • Tech

Topics

2020 Election 2021) Biomass Ultima Donald Trump global warming Project Phoenix8 Proud Boys Roberto Hroval Themis Ecosystem your-feed-visual-investigations
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact

© 2021 All Rights Reserved - Blue Planet Global Media Network

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Spotlight
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Markets
  • Companies
  • Tech
  • Climate
  • Lifestyle

© 2021 All Rights Reserved - Blue Planet Global Media Network

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.