ANU Open Research Repository will be unavailable 8am-9am on Tuesday 13th August 2024 due to scheduled maintenance.
 

Championing the compliance model: From common sense to common action?

Date

Authors

Hobson, Kersty
Australian National University. Centre for Tax System Integrity
Australian Taxation Office

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Centre for Tax System Integrity (CTSI), Research School of Social Sciences, The Australian National University
Australian Taxation Office

Abstract

The Compliance Model was introduced into the Australian Tax Office (Tax Office) as both a procedural and product-outcome innovation, where it has been met with varying degrees of acceptance and criticism. This paper analyses interviews with 22 Compliance Model ‘champions’, to examine what the Compliance Model meant to them and how they put it into practice. It shows how champions believed the Compliance Model was ‘common sense’. It represented and brought together various trains of thought and ideas they already had about how they wanted to work. Champions were able to put these thoughts into action, as the Model legitimised their beliefs and gave them a new language – or ‘discursive space’ – in which they could try and do things differently. Working from ‘within’ the Model, it became a new way of thinking. They were able to see the positive effects of using the Compliance Model and became committed to using it as a tool for encouraging sound working practices and greater taxation compliance. This suggests that the Compliance Model could be taken forward in the Tax Office by putting into action small, day-to-day, behavioural changes that exemplify the conceptual foundations of the Model, without having to change staff ‘values’ or ‘culture’. By bringing the Compliance Model gradually to life, Tax Office staff could experience first-hand the positive effects of the Model, which, for the champions at least, was the strongest factor in committing them to its validity as a worthwhile form of practice.

Description

Keywords

Compliance Model, Australian Tax Office, product-outcome, taxation compliance, behavioural changes, work culture, Tax Office staff

Citation

Source

Type

Working/Technical Paper

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

DOI

Restricted until