Indicators of tax morale: an exploratory study

Taxpayer compliance research has tended to focus on why people evade their taxes rather than on why the vast majority of people do willingly comply with their tax obligations. Whilst tax administrations globally seek to improve the efficiency of their revenue collections, there is growing recognitio...

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Main Authors: McKerchar, Margaret, Bloomquist, Kim, Pope, Jeff
Format: Journal Article
Published: University of New South Wales, Faculty of Law. Atax 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/9096
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author McKerchar, Margaret
Bloomquist, Kim
Pope, Jeff
author_facet McKerchar, Margaret
Bloomquist, Kim
Pope, Jeff
author_sort McKerchar, Margaret
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Taxpayer compliance research has tended to focus on why people evade their taxes rather than on why the vast majority of people do willingly comply with their tax obligations. Whilst tax administrations globally seek to improve the efficiency of their revenue collections, there is growing recognition of the need to have a deeper understanding of why taxpayers comply voluntarily. A person’s internal motivations to comply are commonly characterised as his/her ‘tax morale’, the ‘key’ to the puzzle of understanding taxpayer compliance behavior. Thus tax morale is often seen as a ‘black box’ or the error term for the difference between predicted and observed behavior, a puzzle within a puzzle. This paper initially explores the origins and likely determinants of tax morale, followed by a discussion of measurement difficulties. The key feature of this paper isour attempt to use real taxpayers whose actual compliance behavior is known (rather than self-reported) to identify factors that could be indicative of taxpayer morale from data reported in individual tax returns. Using data from the Internal Revenue Service’s National Research Program from the audit of 1,101 cases with only sole proprietor income, we tested six indicators that theoretically have some correlation with tax morale.Our main findings are threefold. Firstly, IRS random audit studies suggest a possible tax morale component to taxpayer compliance based on the distribution of reporting compliance rates. Secondly, it is extremely difficult to separate this tax morale component from other factors that are at least equally significant in deterring underreporting. Thirdly, although much of the focus in the more recent tax morale literature has focused on religiosity as a causal factor, a more secular explanation may be simply one’s personal integrity (or moral rules and norms) irrespective of religious beliefs if any.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-90962017-01-30T11:10:30Z Indicators of tax morale: an exploratory study McKerchar, Margaret Bloomquist, Kim Pope, Jeff TAX LAW COMPLIANCE Taxpayer compliance research has tended to focus on why people evade their taxes rather than on why the vast majority of people do willingly comply with their tax obligations. Whilst tax administrations globally seek to improve the efficiency of their revenue collections, there is growing recognition of the need to have a deeper understanding of why taxpayers comply voluntarily. A person’s internal motivations to comply are commonly characterised as his/her ‘tax morale’, the ‘key’ to the puzzle of understanding taxpayer compliance behavior. Thus tax morale is often seen as a ‘black box’ or the error term for the difference between predicted and observed behavior, a puzzle within a puzzle. This paper initially explores the origins and likely determinants of tax morale, followed by a discussion of measurement difficulties. The key feature of this paper isour attempt to use real taxpayers whose actual compliance behavior is known (rather than self-reported) to identify factors that could be indicative of taxpayer morale from data reported in individual tax returns. Using data from the Internal Revenue Service’s National Research Program from the audit of 1,101 cases with only sole proprietor income, we tested six indicators that theoretically have some correlation with tax morale.Our main findings are threefold. Firstly, IRS random audit studies suggest a possible tax morale component to taxpayer compliance based on the distribution of reporting compliance rates. Secondly, it is extremely difficult to separate this tax morale component from other factors that are at least equally significant in deterring underreporting. Thirdly, although much of the focus in the more recent tax morale literature has focused on religiosity as a causal factor, a more secular explanation may be simply one’s personal integrity (or moral rules and norms) irrespective of religious beliefs if any. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/9096 University of New South Wales, Faculty of Law. Atax restricted
spellingShingle TAX LAW
COMPLIANCE
McKerchar, Margaret
Bloomquist, Kim
Pope, Jeff
Indicators of tax morale: an exploratory study
title Indicators of tax morale: an exploratory study
title_full Indicators of tax morale: an exploratory study
title_fullStr Indicators of tax morale: an exploratory study
title_full_unstemmed Indicators of tax morale: an exploratory study
title_short Indicators of tax morale: an exploratory study
title_sort indicators of tax morale: an exploratory study
topic TAX LAW
COMPLIANCE
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/9096