Audit Probability versus Effectiveness: The Beckerian Approach Revisited
The Beckerian approach to tax compliance examines how a tax authority can maximize social welfare by trading-off audit probability against the fine rate on undeclared tax. This paper offers an alternative examination of the privately optimal behavior of a tax authority tasked by government to maximize expected revenue. The tax authority is able to trade-off audit probability against audit effectiveness, but takes the fine rate as fixed in the short run. I find that the tax authority's privately optimal audit strategy does not maximize voluntary compliance, and that voluntary compliance is nonmonotonic as a function of the tax authority's budget. Finally, the tax authority's privately optimal effective fine rate on undeclared tax does not exceed two at interior optima.
Year of publication: |
2014
|
---|---|
Authors: | RABLEN, MATTHEW D. |
Published in: |
Journal of Public Economic Theory. - Association for Public Economic Theory - APET, ISSN 1097-3923. - Vol. 16.2014, 2, p. 322-342
|
Publisher: |
Association for Public Economic Theory - APET |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
The saving gateway : implications for optimal saving
Rablen, Matthew D., (2010)
-
Audit probability versus effectiveness : the Beckerian approach revisited
Rablen, Matthew D., (2012)
-
Rablen, Matthew D., (2013)
- More ...