TY - JOUR
T1 - The runaway taxpayer or
T2 - Is prior tax notice effective against scofflaws?
AU - Galmarini, Umberto
AU - Pellegrino, Simone
AU - Piacenza, Massimiliano
AU - Turati, Gilberto
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgements We are grateful to Franco Defendini for having provided us with the data used in the paper, which have been collected under specific guidelines ensuring taxpayer anonymity. We wish to thank the Editor (Eckhard Janeba), two anonymous referees, Rolf Aaberge, Carla Marchese, and Francesca Stroffolini for their helpful comments on previous drafts of the paper. Thanks are also due to the participants at the Workshop in Honour of Robert Sugden (2010, University of Napoli Federico II), the 66th Congress of the International Institute of Public Finance (IIPF 2009, Cape Town), and seminars held at the University of Milan and at the Italian Agency for Internal Revenues (Agenzia delle Entrate, Rome) for suggestions and observations. The usual disclaimer applies. Umberto Galmarini gratefully acknowledges funding from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (ECO2012-37873).
PY - 2014/6
Y1 - 2014/6
N2 - In order to analyze the determinants of tax evasion, the existing literature on individual tax compliance typically takes a 'prior-to-audit' point of view. This paper focuses on a 'post-audit, post-detection'-so far unexplored-framework, by investigating what happens after tax evasion has been discovered and noncompliant taxpayers are asked to pay their debts. We first develop a two-period dynamic model of individual choice, considering an individual that has been already audited and detected as tax evader, who knows that Tax Authorities are looking for her to cash the due amount. We derive the optimal decision of running away in order to avoid paying the bill, and show that the experience of a prior tax notice reduces the probability to behave as a scofflaw. We then exploit information on 'post-audit, post-detection' tax compliance provided by an Italian collection agency for the period 2004-2007 to empirically assess the relationship between prior tax notices and unlawful behavior. The evidence from alternative logit model specifications supports our theoretical prediction: successful tax notices are negatively correlated with the probability of running away.
AB - In order to analyze the determinants of tax evasion, the existing literature on individual tax compliance typically takes a 'prior-to-audit' point of view. This paper focuses on a 'post-audit, post-detection'-so far unexplored-framework, by investigating what happens after tax evasion has been discovered and noncompliant taxpayers are asked to pay their debts. We first develop a two-period dynamic model of individual choice, considering an individual that has been already audited and detected as tax evader, who knows that Tax Authorities are looking for her to cash the due amount. We derive the optimal decision of running away in order to avoid paying the bill, and show that the experience of a prior tax notice reduces the probability to behave as a scofflaw. We then exploit information on 'post-audit, post-detection' tax compliance provided by an Italian collection agency for the period 2004-2007 to empirically assess the relationship between prior tax notices and unlawful behavior. The evidence from alternative logit model specifications supports our theoretical prediction: successful tax notices are negatively correlated with the probability of running away.
KW - Post-audit tax enforcement
KW - Tax collection
KW - Tax evasion
KW - Tax notice
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84904278280&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10797-013-9275-y
DO - 10.1007/s10797-013-9275-y
M3 - Article
SN - 0927-5940
VL - 21
SP - 468
EP - 497
JO - International Tax and Public Finance
JF - International Tax and Public Finance
IS - 3
ER -