Clearing the Bar: Improving Tax Compliance for Small Firms through Target Setting, ,
Chapter in NBER book NBER International Seminar on Macroeconomics 2020 (2021), Linda Tesar, editor We use a new dataset of the universe of Greek corporate tax returns to study a voluntary tax compliance program for small firms. This “self-assessment” program prescribed target taxable profit margins (the ratio of taxable profits to revenues) for different types of activities. Firms that reported profit margins above these targets in a given year were exempt from audits in that year. We find that the firms that take up the program report significantly larger taxable profits than non-eligible firms, with some evidence for longer-lasting effects on tax reporting. Firms that take up the program for more years exhibit stronger effects. We also find that firms can easily and substantially manipulate reported revenue (decreasing it by up to 40%) to help meet prescribed profit margins without paying more in taxes. Overall, the program increased tax revenues collected from small firms, but points to a very large level of baseline under-reporting of profits and the ease of manipulating reported revenues. This chapter is not currently available on-line.
You may be able to access the full text of this document elsewhere. Machine-readable bibliographic record - MARC, RIS, BibTeX Document Object Identifier (DOI): 10.1016/j.jinteco.2021.103452 This chapter first appeared as NBER working paper w27770, Clearing the Bar: Improving Tax Compliance for Small Firms through Target Setting, Yazan Al-Karablieh, Evangelos Koumanakos, Stefanie Stantcheva |

Contact Us









