Conceptual Framework
Conceptual Framework
Conceptual Framework
Relationship
Profile of Respondents:
compliance whose roles and relationship is formally dictated by the law in the
form of the 1997 National Internal Revenue Code, as amended, also known as
the Tax Code. These parties are the Taxpayers and the Tax Authority. Section
(22)(N) of the Tax Code, as amended, defines the taxpayer as any person
particular the Bureau of Internal Revenue (the Bureau), is responsible for the
civic function and how these views affect their attitudes and behaviors with
This study will be carried out in an attempt to measure aspects of the attitudes
This study pays particular interest in the tax behavior of individual taxpayers
source of tax leakage as shown in the graph below (Philippine Tax Leakage,
SEPs contributed only 14% of taxes among individual taxpayers in the past
can provide the Bureau with useful data against which to monitor trends in the
future and which will assist in evaluating and developing Bureaus compliance
Research Hypothesis: The taxpayers behavior and attitude with regard to tax
into account several factors on both sides which potentially influence the
Introduction
Government expenditures are financed by the taxes that are being collected
Types of Taxes. Taxpayers are grouped into two major categories namely
from which the taxes are grouped further into (1) Income Taxes; (2) Business
1
National Internal Revenue Code
What are our taxes used for?
Can you tell me what the taxes, duties and social insurance contributions that you pay are used for?
And for which items listed on this card do you think the taxes, duties and social insurance
contributions that you pay are used?
There is a culture of tax evasion in Philippines everyone who has the opportunity to evade
tax does so.
The potential consequences (e.g. fines and penalties, public naming, prosecution) of getting
caught are not serious enough to stop people evading paying their taxes.
People think they pay too much tax on what they earn already.
People feel they do not get paid enough for the work that they do.
Tax evasion is not a problem in Ireland as people generally report all of their income to
Revenue.
Those who evade paying tax repeatedly should receive a jail sentence.
The Bureau has been successful in dealing with tax evasion over the last 5 years.
The more successful Bureau is at dealing with tax evaders the less likely citizens will be to
evade their taxes.
Exaggerating business expenses to reduce the amount of personal taxes you pay.
Not fully reporting all of your income to reduce the amount of tax you pay.
Making payments to staff without deducting and paying the appropriate PAYE and PRSI
contributions.
PAYE taxpayers not reporting all income earned in their spare time.
Personal Motivation to Pay Taxes (Influential or Non-Influential)
Concern that Revenue will contact you about your tax affairs
Concern that your name will be published on Bureaus Quarterly List of Defaulters.
Concern that you will have to pay interest charges for late payment of tax.
Knowing that the Bureau has the power to receive certain information about you from 3rd
parties (e.g., wages, interest, dividends).
The Bureau will generally accept that your return or claim is correct.
How well informed would you consider yourself to be regarding your tax affairs
and tax entitlements?
Self-Completion Section: Behaviour
Have you been offered services?
Have you used the services offered?
Have you engaged in undeclared work?
three key factors that seem to be important for understanding tax morale: moral rules and
sentiments, fairness, and the relationship between taxpayer and government. These three key
elements in this survey will be important determinants in the empirical part of this book.
The first part focuses on social norms and discusses the four sentiments guilt, shame, duty
and fear. A false declaration will generate anxiety, guilt or, if caught, shame, and will thus
prejudice the taxpayers self-image. It is assumed that a taxpayer feels these moral costs,
which act as a restriction of the possibility set. On the other hand, if someone believes that the
tax system is unfair for example, that the tax burden is too high the moral costs to behave
honestly decrease and tax evasion can be seen as a sort of self-defense. The analysis of social
norms in general will be one of the most demanding challenges in the future research agenda.
One of the main shortcomings is the limited amount of empirical evidence. The shared
conviction of how people ought to behave is part of a societys social norms (see, e.g., Elster,
1989). Adapting to the tax compliance literature, it means that individuals will comply and pay
taxes as long as they believe that compliance is a social norm (see Alm et al., 1999).