scholarly journals Effect of Tax Avoidance and Tax Evasion on Personal Income Tax Administration in Nigeria

Author(s):  
J. F Adebisi ◽  
Daniel Orsaa Gbegi
2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 277-289
Author(s):  
Zuhdi Arman ◽  
Lenny Husna

Foreign exchange trading is one of the most popular businesses in the world, including the Indonesian people. The income generated from an Indonesian trader will certainly raise an aspect of Income Tax that must be fulfilled. This study aims to analyze the application of personal income tax and to determine the form of tax avoidance that can occur in relation to online foreign exchange trading using foreign brokers. The method used in this research is descriptive qualitative, data collection is done by means of in-depth interviews, observation and documentation, informant selection techniques with purposive sampling, data analysis techniques performed by data reduction, data presentation and drawing conclusions. The result of this research is the application of personal income tax on personal traders (taxpayers) which is carried out by means of a self-assessment system with the expectation of voluntary compliance in which the taxpayer must self-report the tax owed at the end of the year. Due to the lack of supervision over the implementation of the self assessment system, and online forex trading transactions are carried out fully online, taxpayers have a very big opportunity to do tax evasion. In the application of individual PPh, there are also several obstacles that occur both from the side of the taxpayer itself and from the side of the government.


2014 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 36-52
Author(s):  
Richard J. Cebula

Unaccounted for currency in the U.S. is argued to reflect the presence of widespread income tax evasion. This empirical study seeks to identify determinants of the underground economy in the U.S. in the form of federal personal income tax evasion over the period 1970-2008. In this study, we use the most recent data available on personal income tax evasion, data that are derived from the General Currency Ratio Model and measured in the form of the ratio of unreported AGI (adjusted gross income) to reported AGI. Other studies of federal income tax evasion for the U.S. are dated and do not use data this current. It is found that personal income tax evasion was an increasing function of the maximum marginal federal personal income tax rate, the percentage of federal personal income tax returns characterized by itemized deductions, and unpopular military engagements, in this case, the War in Iraq, and a decreasing function of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 (during its first two years of being implemented), the ratio of the tax free interest rate yield on high grade municipals to the interest rate yield on ten year Treasury notes (as a measure of the incentive effect of a better return to tax avoidance, which is legal), and higher audit rates of filed federal income tax returns (as a measure of risk from tax evasion) by IRS personnel.


2020 ◽  
pp. 016001762094281
Author(s):  
Julio López-Laborda ◽  
Jaime Vallés-Giménez ◽  
Anabel Zárate-Marco

This article quantifies personal income tax compliance by regions for the first time in Spain and identifies the factors explaining differences in tax compliance between regions, an aspect that has scarcely been analyzed in the literature. To this end, and in addition to the dynamic and spatial components considered by Alm and Yunus, this article considers the variables included in the classical tax evasion model of Allingham and Sandmo, as well as tax morale and political-institutional variables, including those linked to the country’s fiscal decentralization. The results obtained confirm, on one hand, those reached in the very extensive literature studying tax evasion from the individual perspective (including the importance of the dynamic element) and, on the other, the relevance of the spatial component in explaining tax compliance, so that greater or lesser tax compliance is partly explained by factors such as the tax behavior of neighbors or how those neighbors are treated by the public sector.


2016 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
Félix Domínguez-Barrero ◽  
Julio López-Laborda ◽  
Fernando Rodrigo-Sauco

2009 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 1850175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert T. Kudrle

States around the world appear more determined than ever to end tax haven abuse. The new U.S. administration, for example, is taking action against both major tax haven problems: corporation income tax avoidance and personal income tax evasion. Some progress may be made. This essay argues, however, that only radically new policy will likely suffice either to shore up corporate tax revenues or to sharply diminish evasion. Global formula apportionment is needed if the corporate income tax is to be preserved, and only a combination of automatic information sharing among governments and source withholding can stamp out evasion. As in most areas of international economic policy, U.S. leadership is essential.


10.26458/1821 ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 25-52
Author(s):  
Gbadegesin Babatunde ADEYEYE ◽  
Adeleke Oluwafemi ADEOYE ◽  
Adeyemi Mobolaji ADEYEYE

The study examined the effectiveness of Personal Income Tax Administration in the rural communities, focusing on assessment and revenue collection methods, effectiveness and efficiency of Relevant Tax Authorities. 125 copies of questionnaire were administered on respondents. Descriptive statistics was used to analyse the opinions of key stakeholders directly connected with Direct and Minimum Tax Assessments in six selected Local Government Areas in Ogun State, Nigeria. Testing of the hypotheses for the study was done using both simple and multiple regression analysis. The findings from the study indicate that tax assessment method significantly encourages voluntary enrolment into the tax net and that effective collection method adopted by the relevant tax authorities ensures optimal tax revenue collection. The study recommends that government should intensify its enlightenment programmes and to introduce awards for recognition of the best rural taxpayers.


Author(s):  
Diogo Pedrosa ◽  
Antonio Trigo ◽  
João Varajão ◽  
Pedro Sá Silva

This chapter describes a simulator used by accounting students to mimic the official process of filling out a Personal Income Tax form. According to the Portuguese law, this form describes the amount of the employees’ Personal Income Tax withheld within a company, which must be submitted periodically to the Portuguese Tax Administration. This process is accomplished through an E-government tool accessed by only authorized company staff, which makes it impossible for accounting students to use it. This presents an obstacle for students who are learning about accounting because they cannot experiment with the “real” process in the courses they are studying. By using the proposed simulator that imitates the behavior and interface of the official tools, students can “learn by doing.”


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