Description
Not everyone complies with the United States Internal Revenue Code. Many individuals and organizations fail to file timely tax returns, assess their tax liability correctly, or pay taxes when due. To improve compliance, tax administrators must choose among alternative strategies, such as increasing evaders' risks of punishment, motivating social norms, and making compliance easier.
Concerned with these choices, the IRS asked the National Academy to assess previous research on the determinants of taxpayer compliance and to highlight the most promising areas for future research. The Academy's panel authored the two-volume Taxpayer Compliance. Volume 2 is a collection of eight background papers commissioned by the panel. They present novel theories and research ideas proposed by scholars from many social sciences to improve the understanding of taxpayer compliance. The varied topics addressed include: the political and institutional context of the American tax system; a typology of noncompliance; a study of the way the visibility of noncompliance affects patterns of taxpaying in the house-painting profession; and theories of ways tax practitioners may affect their clients' compliance.
These papers not only illustrate for a general audience what various disciplines can add to knowledge but also suggest for specialized researchers the opportunities that taxpayer compliance offers for extending and testing the theories of their disciplines. Taxpayer Compliance will be a valuable reference for tax practitioners and others concerned with noncompliance problems, and for scholars and students of law and sociology, political science, social psychology, and economics.
Drawing on multiple disciplines with a significant interest in taxpayer compliance, the National Academy's Panel on Taxpayer Compliance Research authored the two-volume Taxpayer Compliance. Volume 2 presents novel theories and research ideas proposed by scholars from many social sciences to improve the understanding of taxpayer compliance.
About the Author
Jeffrey A. Roth is criminologist and associate director for research at the University of Pennsylvania's Jerry Lee Center of Criminology. John T. Scholz is the Francis Eppes Distinguished Professor of Political Science at Florida State University.
Reviews
"Together [with Volume 1] they provide a state-of-the-art summary of research in this field of study, which is likely to grow in both scholarly and practical significant in the future." * Choice *
Book Information
ISBN 9780812281507
Author Jeffrey A. Roth
Format Hardback
Page Count 282
Imprint University of Pennsylvania Press
Publisher University of Pennsylvania Press