
handle: 10419/214357
Why so many people pay their taxes, even though fines and audit probability are low, is a central question in the tax compliance literature. Positing a homo oeconomicus having a refined motivation structure sheds light on this puzzle. This paper provides empirical evidence for the relevance of conditional cooperation, using survey data from 30 West and East European countries. We find a high correlation between perceived tax evasion and tax morale. The results remain robust after exploiting endogeneity and conducting several robustness tests. We also observe a strong positive correlation between institutional quality and tax mmorale. Keywords: Tax morale; Tax compliance; Tax evasion; Pro-social behavior; Institutions
330, H260, H730, D640, tax evasion, D640, H26, 2002 Economics and Econometrics, Institutions, 10007 Department of Economics, IEW Institute for Empirical Research in Economics (former), institutions, H260, H73, Tax Compliance, Pro-social Behavior, Tax Evasion, ddc:330, Tax Morale, H730, pro-social behavior, 330 Economics, tax morale; tax compliance; tax evasion; pro-social behavior; institutions, tax compliance, tax morale, tax compliance, tax evasion, pro-social behavior, institutions, D64, tax morale, jel: jel:D64, jel: jel:H26, jel: jel:H73
330, H260, H730, D640, tax evasion, D640, H26, 2002 Economics and Econometrics, Institutions, 10007 Department of Economics, IEW Institute for Empirical Research in Economics (former), institutions, H260, H73, Tax Compliance, Pro-social Behavior, Tax Evasion, ddc:330, Tax Morale, H730, pro-social behavior, 330 Economics, tax morale; tax compliance; tax evasion; pro-social behavior; institutions, tax compliance, tax morale, tax compliance, tax evasion, pro-social behavior, institutions, D64, tax morale, jel: jel:D64, jel: jel:H26, jel: jel:H73
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| influence This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | Top 1% | |
| impulse This indicator reflects the initial momentum of an article directly after its publication, based on the underlying citation network. | Top 10% |
