To have better understanding of compliance behavior of individual taxpayers in developing countries especially Nigeria, this study is undertaken primarily to test relationship between taxpayers’ perception<br />about public governance quality and their compliance behavior as well as to<br />determine whether the relationship is moderated by financial condition and risk preference individually and jointly. This study involved a survey of individual taxpayers’ opinion, perception and behavior about public governance quality as well as tax compliance. The major finding of<br />this study is that public governance quality has significant positive relationship with tax compliance behavior. The study also indicates that risk preference has strong negative moderating effect on the relationship between public governance quality and tax compliance behavior. Administration of income tax in Nigeria is characterized by low compliance level and therefore, there is no doubt that improvement in public governance quality would contribute significantly in reawakening the culture of tax compliance among individual taxpayers in Nigeria. Empirically, nothing much is known in tax compliance literature about the influence of<br />public governance quality on tax compliance behavior of individual taxpayers as well as the moderating effect of financial condition and risk preference on tax compliance and its determinants. This study extended tax compliance model to incorporate public governance quality and moderating effects of financial condition and risk preference.<br /><br />
Purpose This study aims to expand the conventional tax effort model to incorporate relevant economic freedom variables to investigate whether economic freedom fosters tax revenue performance in `sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Design/methodology/approach This study uses data from 42 countries across the four sub-regions of SSA from the period 2005 to 2012 with 252 year-country observations in an unbalanced panel method. The data were statistically treated using feasible generalised least square (FGLS) and panel-corrected standard errors (PCSE) estimate techniques. Findings The findings are twofold. First, the principal finding of the study suggests that economic freedom promotes tax revenue performance. Precisely, the FGLS analysis indicates that property rights freedom, freedom from corruption and investment freedom, as well as the composite economic freedom, exerted positive significant impact on tax revenue performance. This implies that country, which attained high degree of economic freedom, is likely to have higher tax-to-GDP ratio than a country with low level of economic freedom. Secondly, the results of most conventional variables conform to the prediction in the traditional theory except per capita income. Specifically, agriculture share in GDP and per capita income indicate negative significant relationship with tax revenue performance. Originality/value Because little is known empirically about the connection between economic freedom and tax revenue performance, this study extended the conventional tax effort model to incorporate the economic freedom to bridge the knowledge gap due to the absence of empirical evidence on the relationship between economic freedom and tax effort.
The global financial crisis had devastating effect on both developed and developing economies. In Nigeria, the effect of the crisis swerve through the major sectors of the economy with the banking sector greatly affected. This study investigates the determinants of Nigerian banks' performance from 1999 to 2010 while taking into consideration the intervening effect of global financial condition. The data of the study, which were extracted from annual reports of the banks as well as various publications of Central Bank of Nigeria and Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation, were treated statistically using multiple regressions. The study provides evidence indicating that in the presence of the effect of global financial condition, only assets quality and market concentration are significant determinants of the Nigerian banks' performance. By implications, these findings suggest the need to keep nonperforming assets at minimum and introduce a policy to encourage fair competition among the banks operating in Nigeria in order to check concentration of banking services among only few banks.
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