Calendrier du 17 mai 2024
Casual Friday Development Seminar - Brown Bag Seminar
Du 17/05/2024 de 13:00 à 14:00
R2-21
REUTZEL Fabian (PSE)
Inequality of Opportunity and Access to Internet: Evidence from India
EU Tax Observatory Seminar
Du 17/05/2024 de 12:00 à 13:00
Salle R1-14
PARADISI Matteo (EIEF)
Audit Rule Disclosure and Tax Compliance
écrit avec with Enrico Di Gregorio, Matteo Paradisi and Elia Sartori
We show that tax authorities can stimulate tax compliance by strategically releasing audit-relevant information. We focus on audit policies that disclose to taxpayers that audit risk discretely drops above a threshold determined by their predicted revenues. In a theoretical framework, we derive conditions for the existence of improvements over flat undisclosed audit rules, and we build a test for such improvements that relies on a change in the probability jump at the threshold. Our empirical analysis relies on the Sector Studies, an Italian policy with a disclosed threshold-based design. We leverage more than 26 million Sector Study files submitted between 2007 and 2016. First, we show that taxpayers bunch at the threshold to a great extent, and that this behavior is related to evasion proxies, availability of evasion technologies, and tax incentives. Then, we exploit a staggered Sector Studies reform that widens the initial audit risk discontinuity. In line with our theory, taxpayers who benefit from audit exemptions above the threshold reduce their relative compliance, while those below the threshold improve it. However, mean reported profits increase by 16.2% in treated sectors over six years, suggesting – in light of our test – that a disclosed rule performs better than an undisclosed one.
Behavior Working Group
Du 17/05/2024 de 11:00 à 12:00
MSE salle 115
KLOPFENSTEIN Aurélien ()
Cognitive Barriers to Impact Investing
Sustainable investing has been gaining traction as a means to speed up the environmental transition. Recent theoretical work highlights that a sustainable investor looking to maximize their impact should focus not just on their own stocks' emissions, but should also internalize the whole market's emissions – following a broad mandate. Sustainable investors should therefore coordinate with other fellow sustainable investors, as well as with the market as a whole. The goal of this project is to explore behavioral barriers to broad-mandate investing. In a first experiment, we find that some market structures make broad-mandate investing very counterintuitive for investors, irrespective of their preferences. Further experiments are planned in order to identify the precise cognitive mechanism at play