Prosecuting non-lodgers: to persuade or punish?
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Williams, Robert
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
Prosecution in the court is one of the Australian Taxation Office’s (Tax Office's) last
resort enforcement procedures for the small numbers of taxpayers who fail to lodge a tax
return. The Tax Office has generally assumed that prosecution will obtain lodgment of
the return being sought and, via deterrence, improve longer-term compliance behaviour
in the prosecuted individual. This paper examines these assumptions by relating tax
return data to the outcomes of court cases of prosecuted individuals. The results show
that prosecutions were only moderately successful in obtaining lodgment and that
lodgment rates (for prosecuted taxpayers) reduced significantly in subsequent years.
Nevertheless, these lodgment rates were still three to four times greater than those of
taxpayers who were selected for prosecution but did not receive the summons issued to
them. There were also reasonable levels of lodgment when a summons was withdrawn at
the request of the taxpayer, suggesting that a full prosecution is not required in every
case. The results also show that a large fine is linked to lower levels of lodgment.
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