Why Young People are Less Compliant on Tax: Enduring or Transient Defiance ?
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Australian National University. Regulatory Institutions Network
Braithwaite, Valerie
Smart, Michael
Reinhart, Monika
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The Australian National University, Regulatory Institutions Network (RegNet)
Abstract
One of the more consistent predictors of tax non-compliance has been age: Younger
people are less compliant in attitude and behaviour than older people. Some interpret
this finding as youthful defiance that young people will “age through.” Others ask if
tax systems are losing some of their credibility in modern day democracies. Using
data from the Community Hopes, Fears and Actions Survey, this paper confirmed that
young people are less compliant and have a relatively poor pro-tax sensibility.
However, less behavioural compliance on the part of young people could not be
explained satisfactorily by their poor pro-tax sensibility. When age and pro-tax
sensibility were compared as predictors of compliance across a number of specific
compliance outcomes, variables of personal tax ethics and preference for honest tax
advice (tax morale variables) were far more important determinants of compliance
than the age of the taxpayer. Australia’s taxpaying culture, rather than its youth
culture holds the key to high tax compliance.
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Open Access
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This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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