Nudges and Threats: Soft vs Hard Incentives for Tax Compliance
Abstract
We study what induces delinquent taxpayers to pay their taxes due. We use high quality administrative
data from the Swedish Tax Agency. We find a strong effect of the standard enforcement regime: a threat of having the debt handed over to the Enforcement Agency increases payments by roughly 10 percentage points. When including actual enforcement, payment increases by around 20 percentage points compared to those who do not risk enforcement. In a field experiment, we compare these effects of standard enforcement to those of much milder nudges, consisting of letters reminding tax delinquents to pay their taxes due. We find that a “pure nudge”, i.e., the inclusion of an extra piece of paper with no valuable information, has an effect
of 7-8 percentage points for those who do not risk enforcement upon non-payment. However, the
same nudge has no detectable effect for the group at risk of enforcement. Social-norm messages
in turn increase payments both for those who risk enforcement and for those who do not, but to
a much smaller degree. We also find that a pure nudge works much better for those who receive
a physical letter than for those who receive information electronically, while the reaction to the
social-norm nudge is significant for those who get the electronic information.
Other description
JEL Codes: C21, D03, D91, H24, H26
Collections
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Date
2021-02Author
Andersson, Henrik
Engström, Per
Nordblom, Katarina
Wanander, Susanna
Keywords
tax compliance
RCT
nudge
quasi-experiment
regression discontinuity
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
799
Language
eng