'Trust me, I'm the taxman': The role of trust in nurturing compliance
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Murphy, Kristina
Australian National University. Centre for Tax System Integrity
Australian Taxation Office
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Centre for Tax System Integrity (CTSI), Research School of Social Sciences, The Australian National University
Australian Taxation Office
Australian Taxation Office
Abstract
Why an institution’s rules and regulations are obeyed or disobeyed is an extremely
important question for regulatory agencies. This paper discusses the findings of an
empirical study that shows that the use of threat and coercion as a regulatory tool—in
addition to being more expensive to implement—can actually produce the opposite
behaviour from that sought. Using survey data collected from 2301 taxpayers accused of
tax avoidance, it will be demonstrated that variables such as trust are just as important for
determining compliance. If people trust the motives of authorities, they are more likely to
view those authorities as acting fairly, to consider them legitimate, and to defer to their
decisions voluntarily. It is therefore argued that to effectively shape desired behaviour,
regulators will need to move beyond motivation linked purely to deterrence. Strategies
directed at reducing levels of distrust between the two sides may prove particularly
effective in gaining voluntary compliance with an organisation’s rules and regulations.
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