Publication | Open Access
The Use of Big Data Analytics by the IRS: What Tax Practitioners Need to Know
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2018
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Social Data AnalysisEngineeringBig Data AnalyticsCompliance AnalyticsTax PractitionersWeb AnalyticsMining MethodsBig Data InfrastructureBig Data ModelData ScienceData MiningManagementSocial Media SitesData ManagementTax PolicySocial Medium MiningBudget ReductionsPublic PolicyKnowledge DiscoveryData PrivacyWeb Mining (Data Mining)Social Data ManagementWeb Mining (Geotechnical Engineering)Privacy PreservationFinancial AnalyticsSocial ProfilingBig Data
With the budget reductions and losses in staff over the past several years, the IRS has been forced to do more with less. In turn, the IRS has turned to big data analytics make up for its loss of personal and the impact of the budget reductions. In 2011, the IRS created the Office of Compliance Analytics in order to create analytics programs that could identify potential refund fraud, detect taxpayer identity theft, and become more efficient in handling noncompliance issues. The IRS uses a wide range of analytic methods to mine public and commercial data including social media sites such as Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram. The data collected from this mining is combined with IRS’s own proprietary information and analyzed using pattern recognition algorithms, which help to identify potential noncompliant taxpayers. The current ability to continuous monitor financial and personal behavior facilitates the building of exhaustive histories of individuals. Knowing that the IRS is utilizing public internet data from websites such as Facebook, taxpayers should consider that their posts could impact their probability of audit.