2018
DOI: 10.1093/jeea/jvy033
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The Intergenerational Causal Effect of Tax Evasion: Evidence from the Commuter Tax Allowance in Austria

Abstract: Does tax evasion run in the family? To answer this question, we study the case of the commuter tax allowance in Austria. This allowance is designed as a step function of the distance between the residence and the workplace, creating sharp discontinuities at each bracket threshold. The distance to these brackets is a strong determinant of compliance since it corresponds to the probability of detection. The match of different administrative data sources allows us to observe actual compliance behavior at the indi… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 41 publications
(38 reference statements)
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“…For claimed deductions, it is more difficult to pin down real versus avoidance/evasion responses, since they are comprised of several different deduction items (and data on specific line items is not available). Paetzold and Winner (2016) and Frimmel et al (2017) suggest that in the case of the commuter tax break, at least some of the observed deduction responses are due to evasion. Unfortunately, the data at hand do not allow to investigation of the degree of evasion on other deduction items.…”
Section: Conclusion and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For claimed deductions, it is more difficult to pin down real versus avoidance/evasion responses, since they are comprised of several different deduction items (and data on specific line items is not available). Paetzold and Winner (2016) and Frimmel et al (2017) suggest that in the case of the commuter tax break, at least some of the observed deduction responses are due to evasion. Unfortunately, the data at hand do not allow to investigation of the degree of evasion on other deduction items.…”
Section: Conclusion and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A few earlier papers have studied regional enforcement spillovers between individuals in the context of TV license fee collection (Rincke and Traxler (2011), Drago et al (2015) and income tax filing (Meiselman (2018)). Frimmel et al (2018) and Alstadsaeter et al (2019) analyze tax evasion and avoidance spillovers within the family, while these two papers do not focus on the effects of enforcement measures. Pomeranz (2015), Boning et al (2018) and Brockmeyer et al (2018) analyze enforcement spillovers in firm networks.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on the same data, Heuermann et al (2017) investigated employer compensation for center-periphery commuting travel. Frimmel et al (2017); Paetzold and Winner (2016) combined tax data from the Austrian Ministry of Finance and employee-employer data from the Austrian Social Security Database. The GIS system was used to calculate the travel distance to work based on the employee's zip codes and the employer (the geographic center of the region was taken for each index).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%