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Tax Morale and Policy Intervention

Abstract
This paper deals with tax morale and how norms may evolve over time. The special focus is on buying black-market services. I apply mechanisms from social psychology to explain how personal norms may evolve due to one's own past behavior through self-signaling and due to conformity based on social interactions. These changes over time result in multiple equilibria, so that the economy can develop stronger social norms and less evasion over time, or weaker norms and more evasion in the long run. An economy on a trajectory toward the “bad” equilibrium may be permanently pushed onto a trajectory toward the “good” equilibrium by means of a suffciently strong temporary policy. Observations from a recent tax reform in Sweden strongly support the theory and suggest that other policies than enforcement may indeed be a powerful tool in inuencing both behavior and attitudes.
Other description
JEL: D91; H26
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/54287
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  • Working papers
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gupea_2077_54287_1.pdf (977.1Kb)
Date
2017-11
Author
Nordblom, Katarina
Keywords
Social norms
Endogenous norms
Tax evasion
Self-signaling
Normative conformity
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
711
Language
eng
Metadata
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