Tax compliance and behavioural response in South Africa: an alternative investigation

Taxpayer behaviour has in South Africa moved to the forefront of the investigation of revenue collection with regular tax awareness campaigns being launched by the South African Revenue Service (SARS). Issues relating to tax amnesty and the contribution of the informal sector (second economy) to tax...

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Main Authors: Zurika Robinson, Rebone Gcabo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2013-07-01
Series:South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences
Online Access:https://sajems.org/index.php/sajems/article/view/695
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spelling doaj-80de16dbd24e41de85af32cdddab63be2020-11-24T21:25:57ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences1015-88122222-34362013-07-0110335737010.4102/sajems.v10i3.695214Tax compliance and behavioural response in South Africa: an alternative investigationZurika Robinson0Rebone Gcabo1SA Reserve BankUniversity of PretoriaTaxpayer behaviour has in South Africa moved to the forefront of the investigation of revenue collection with regular tax awareness campaigns being launched by the South African Revenue Service (SARS). Issues relating to tax amnesty and the contribution of the informal sector (second economy) to tax revenue have become important. This paper attempts to find explanations, be they economic or psychological, for taxpayer behaviour in South Africa. Factors influencing tax evasion and ultimately collection targets are thus examined. A questionnaire was designed to determine how individuals, in this case a sample of students, respond when filing taxes. Each question frames a scenario to invoke a specific tax regime. The paper’s unique findings show, generally, that behaviour is to a large extent determined by economic factors, specifically inequality as predicted by the expected utility theory. This theory also successfully predicts 50 per cent of the responses to the control questions. The remaining 50 per cent are explained by combined economic and psychological factors, modelled by the prospect theory. This is significant considering the fact that the results were generated within a developing and not a developed context as is the case in most studies of this type.https://sajems.org/index.php/sajems/article/view/695
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zurika Robinson
Rebone Gcabo
spellingShingle Zurika Robinson
Rebone Gcabo
Tax compliance and behavioural response in South Africa: an alternative investigation
South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences
author_facet Zurika Robinson
Rebone Gcabo
author_sort Zurika Robinson
title Tax compliance and behavioural response in South Africa: an alternative investigation
title_short Tax compliance and behavioural response in South Africa: an alternative investigation
title_full Tax compliance and behavioural response in South Africa: an alternative investigation
title_fullStr Tax compliance and behavioural response in South Africa: an alternative investigation
title_full_unstemmed Tax compliance and behavioural response in South Africa: an alternative investigation
title_sort tax compliance and behavioural response in south africa: an alternative investigation
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences
issn 1015-8812
2222-3436
publishDate 2013-07-01
description Taxpayer behaviour has in South Africa moved to the forefront of the investigation of revenue collection with regular tax awareness campaigns being launched by the South African Revenue Service (SARS). Issues relating to tax amnesty and the contribution of the informal sector (second economy) to tax revenue have become important. This paper attempts to find explanations, be they economic or psychological, for taxpayer behaviour in South Africa. Factors influencing tax evasion and ultimately collection targets are thus examined. A questionnaire was designed to determine how individuals, in this case a sample of students, respond when filing taxes. Each question frames a scenario to invoke a specific tax regime. The paper’s unique findings show, generally, that behaviour is to a large extent determined by economic factors, specifically inequality as predicted by the expected utility theory. This theory also successfully predicts 50 per cent of the responses to the control questions. The remaining 50 per cent are explained by combined economic and psychological factors, modelled by the prospect theory. This is significant considering the fact that the results were generated within a developing and not a developed context as is the case in most studies of this type.
url https://sajems.org/index.php/sajems/article/view/695
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AT rebonegcabo taxcomplianceandbehaviouralresponseinsouthafricaanalternativeinvestigation
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