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Corporate Income Tax Evasion and Managerial Preferences

David Joulfaian

United States Department of the Treasury

The Review of Economics and Statistics 2000

This paper investigates the role of managerial preferences in shaping corporate income tax evasion. Using noncompliance with the personal income tax as a measure of taste for evasion, the empirical results from a sample of corporate income tax returns show that managerial preferences play an important role in determining noncompliance with the corporate income tax. Basic sample tabulations show that, when compared to compliant firms, noncompliant firms are three times more likely to be managed by executives who have understated personal taxes. In addition, results from multivariate analyses suggest that the amount of underreported income is significantly higher in the presence of such executives.

DOI
10.1162/rest.2000.82.4.698
Volume
82 (4)
Pages
698-701
Language
en
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