Title: Eliza Ahmed
1When tax offices become collection agencies At
what cost?
- Eliza Ahmed
- Centre for Tax System Integrity
- Australian National University
2- Do tax authorities leave themselves at risk of
tax evasion when they become collection agencies
for controversial government policies?
3- 1. When tax collectors become collectors for
child support and student loans Jeopardizing or
protecting the revenue base? (Ahmed V.
Braithwaite) - 2. Tax evasion among graduates repaying student
loans Balancing the books, sending a political
message, or flouting the system? (V. Braithwaite
Ahmed) - 3. Can justice and shame deter an escalation in
tax evasion? (Ahmed V. Braithwaite)
4What does past research tell us?
- Financial self-interest (Allingham Sandmo,
1972 Freiberg, 1990) - Deterrence (Grasmick Bursik, 1990 Lewis, 1982)
- Moral obligation (Grasmick Bursik, 1990 McGraw
Scholz, 1991 Schwartz Orleans, 1967)
5What does past research tell us? (contd)
- Shame management (Ahmed, Harris, Braithwaite,
Braithwaite, 2001) - Fairness (Kinsey Grasmick, 1993 Scholz
Lubell, 1998) - Reactance (Kirchler, 1999)
6What does past research tell us? (contd)
- Trust (Scholz Lubell, 1998 Tyler, 1997, 2001)
- Trust norms (V. Braithwaite, 1998)
7STUDY 1Research questions
- 1. Are taxpayers making additional payments
through the tax system less compliant? - 2. To what extent does belief in trust norms act
as a social constraint, and prevent tax evasion?
8METHOD
- Community Hopes, Fears and Actions Survey
(Braithwaite, 2000) - 7754 randomly sampled Australian citizens were
mailed out the survey questionnaires - 2040 respondents returned their completed
questionnaires
9MEASURES
- Dependent variable Tax evasion
- Under-reporting income
- Engaging in the cash economy
- Exaggerating deductions
10Independent variables
- Additional payments
- Deterrence
- Shame management
- - shame acknowledgment
- - shame displacement
- - shame avoidance
- Trust norms
11 12- Table 1. Correlation coefficients between tax
evasion and other variables
??? p lt .001 ?? p lt .01
13Table 2. Standardized beta coefficients from
regression analysis predicting tax evasion
??? p lt .001 ?? p lt .01 ? p lt .05
14___ Additional payments ----- No payments
- Figure 1. The role of trust norms in moderating
the relationship between making additional
payments and tax evasion
15Summary from Study 1
- When policy changes, citizens may protest, but
the relationship between citizens and the tax
office acts as a protector, ensuring that
non-compliance does not spin out of control.
16STUDY 2
17Personal injustice
- Figure 1. A conceptual model of justice, shame
and tax evasion
18STUDY 2Research aims
- 1. To explore the extent to which additional
payments, perceptions of justice, and shame
management play important roles in predicting tax
non-compliance - 2. To evaluate the theoretical relationships
among all variables sketched in Figure 1
19METHOD
- Graduates Hopes, Visions and Actions Survey
(Ahmed, 2000) - 1500 stratified sampled Australian graduates were
mailed out the survey questionnaires - 447 respondents returned their completed
questionnaires
20MEASURES
- Tax non-compliance variables
- Dissociation (desire to game play or disengage)
- Tax evasion (behaviors of not lodging,
under-declaring income, or over-claiming
deductions)
21Independent variables
- Additional payments
- Perceived injustice
- - societal (unfair social policy)
- - personal (unfair exchange)
- Shame management
- - shame acknowledgment
- - shame displacement
- - shame avoidance
22RESULTS
23- Table 3. Results from the logistic regression
analysis in predicting tax evasion
??? p lt .001 ?? p lt .01 ? p lt .05
24 .12
- Figure 2. Results of a path analysis showing the
relationships among all variables considered in
Study 2
25Table 4. The overall fit indices for the model
derived from the path analysis
26- ... The one thing that I did find annoying was
paying HECS for one or two units where the tutors
were hopeless and basically didnt teach us much
at all. I realize it is more the responsibility
of the universities to ensure that their tutors
are competent, but it is in cases like these that
people resent having to pay HECS, ie. when they
didnt learn anything new!
27- The government should realize that investing in
tertiary education is investing in the countrys
future. By raising fees, introducing up-front
fees, ..., they are encouraging people not to
study and not to help educate the country.
Education should be free, after all people in the
army get paid to be educated!
28- I think that HECS should only be repaid if the
education received has been of value in gaining
employment
29Where to from here?
- Responsive regulation is distinguished (from
other strategies ...) both in what triggers a
regulatory response and what the regulatory
response will be. ... Government should be
attuned to the differing motivations of regulated
actors. Efficacious regulation should speak to
the diverse objectives of regulated firms,
industry associations, and individuals within
them (Ayres J. Braithwaite, 1992)