Fairness and Tax Morale in Developing Countries

被引:0
作者
Néstor Castañeda
机构
[1] University College London,Institute of the Americas
来源
Studies in Comparative International Development | 2024年 / 59卷
关键词
Tax morale; Fairness; Preferences for redistribution; Tax compliance;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This paper investigates the relationship between individuals' attitudes towards fairness and their views about tax compliance in developing countries. It argues that individuals’ attitudes regarding fairness shape their views about paying taxes and their ethical stances regarding tax evasion. Using survey data for 18 major cities in Latin America, we find that individuals who are highly sensitive to fairness are less likely to consider paying taxes as a civic duty and more likely to justify tax evasion. These attitudes toward tax compliance are not inelastic. We also find evidence that individualst argues about reciprocity and merit mediate the effect of fairness on personal views about tax compliance. Finally, this paper shows that the heuristics people use to explain their position in the income distribution make them sensitive to inequality, and it affects their tax morale. These findings help us better understand the concept of reciprocity and provide valuable lessons on the urgent task of expanding fiscal capacity to promote economic growth and inequality in developing countries.
引用
收藏
页码:113 / 137
页数:24
相关论文
共 162 条
[1]  
Abeler J(2015)Complex tax incentives American Economic Journal Economic Policy 7 1-28
[2]  
Jäger S(2015)Equilibrium tax rates and income redistribution: A laboratory study Journal of Public Economics 130 45-58
[3]  
Agranov M(2005)Fairness and redistribution American Economic Review 95 960-980
[4]  
Palfrey TR(1972)Income tax evasion: A theoretical analysis Journal of Public Economics 1 323-338
[5]  
Alesina A(1993)Fiscal exchange, collective decision institutions, and tax compliance Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 22 285-303
[6]  
Angeletos G-M(2017)When you know your neighbour pays taxes: Information, peer effects and tax compliance Fiscal Studies 38 587-613
[7]  
Allingham MG(2018)Fairness and tax preferences: a conjoint experiment Unequal Democracies Working Paper 3 1-136
[8]  
Sandmo A(2017)The structure of American income tax policy preferences The Journal of Politics 79 1-16
[9]  
Alm J(2016)Who gives, who gains? progressivity and preferences Comparative Political Studies 49 529-563
[10]  
Jackson BR(2020)Opting for exit: Informalization, social policy discontent, and lack of good governance’ Latin American Politics and Society 62 1-28