This note presents descriptive evidence of self‐admitted tax evasion in New Zealand and identifies characteristics associated with this behaviour. A survey of voters from Christchurch is conducted. The frequency of self‐admitted under‐reporting of income (23%) is much more frequent than the frequency of self‐admitted overstating of deductions (12%). Using logistic regression analysis, under‐reporting behaviour is associated with age, income, the number of evaders personally known and the morality and consequences of evasion behaviour. Determining the existence or nonexistence of associations between key independent variables and evasion behaviour represents useful information for tax policy makers and others involved in revenue enforcement activities.
Understanding tax preferences toward the estate tax could help resolve the continuing debate on whether the tax should be repealed. Gathering public opinion, however, is not a simple task as differing frames can alter the solicited preferences. For example, the framing literature has shown that equivalent but countervailing frames can produce dissimilar responses. That is, providing positive descriptors of an attribute tends to lead to a more favorable evaluative response than does using negative descriptors (Levin et al. 1998). In contrast, the resistance literature has found that when respondents possess a prior counter attitude that conflicts with the descriptors, exposure to the descriptors can strengthen the original counter attitude. The estate tax, a contentious issue that is typically viewed negatively by taxpayers, provides an issue in which predictions from framing and resistance literatures are in direct contrast. Our study demonstrates that prior counter attitude reverses the expected framing effects. In sum, when respondents do not initially approve of an estate tax, favorable frames lead to more negative responses than do unfavorable frames.
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