后唯物主义与企业避税

IF 2 Q2 BUSINESS, FINANCE
Yujia Cui, Jiwei Wang, Kangtao Ye
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文探讨了后物质主义文化与企业避税行为之间的关系。虽然企业避税很普遍,但各国的避税程度各不相同。先前的研究表明,国家文化与避税水平有关(例如,DeBacker, J., Heim, b.t., & Tran, A.(2015)中的腐败文化。从海外引进腐败文化:来自美国企业逃税的证据。金融经济研究,2011(1),122-138。https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfineco.2012.11.009],与社会信任[Kanagaretnam, K., Lee, J., Lim, C. Y., Lobo, G. J.](2018)。社会信任与企业避税。会计研究,23(4),1588-1628。https://doi.org/10.1007/s11142-018-9466-y]等)。与以往的研究关注长期文化因素不同,本文考察了企业避税与当前重要的文化趋势,即后物质主义文化之间的关系。检验假设后物质主义文化与企业避税之间没有关联。关注企业避税的各种利益相关者,包括政府、政策制定者、投资者、审计师和公司经理。采用线性概率模型和普通最小二乘回归。本研究考察了后物质主义文化与企业避税行为之间的关系。我们使用了2011-2014年期间中国税务审计的专有数据集,并测试了税收执法的调节作用。我们还使用1993-2014年期间来自21个国家的跨国样本检验了结果的外部有效性。利用中国税务审计的专有数据集,我们发现,在后物质主义价值观较高的国家的投资者所拥有的公司在中国从事避税行为的可能性较小。此外,我们发现一些证据表明,当税收执法更强时,后唯物主义与避税之间的负相关关系更为明显,这表明民族文化和正式制度是互补的。为了检验我们主要结果的外部有效性,我们进一步使用了来自21个国家22年的跨国样本。来自跨国样本的证据与来自中国税务审计环境的发现是一致的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Postmaterialism and Corporate Tax Avoidance
Synopsis The research problem This paper explores the association between postmaterialistic culture and corporate tax-avoidance behavior. Motivation Although corporate tax avoidance is prevalent, the degree of tax avoidance varies across countries. Previous studies have suggested that national culture is associated with the level of tax avoidance (e.g., corruption culture in [DeBacker, J., Heim, B. T., & Tran, A. (2015). Importing corruption culture from overseas: Evidence from corporate tax evasion in the United States. Journal of Financial Economics, 117(1), 122–138. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfineco.2012.11.009 ], and societal trust in [Kanagaretnam, K., Lee, J., Lim, C. Y., & Lobo, G. J. (2018). Societal trust and corporate tax avoidance. Review of Accounting Studies, 23(4), 1588–1628. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11142-018-9466-y ], among others). Unlike prior studies focusing on longstanding cultural factors, this paper examined the association between corporate tax avoidance and an important current culture trend, i.e., postmaterialistic culture. The test hypotheses There is no association between postmaterialistic culture and corporate tax avoidance. Target population Various stakeholders that care about corporate tax avoidance including the government, policymakers, investors, auditors, and firm managers. Adopted methodology Linear Probability Model and Ordinary Least Squares regressions. Analyses We examined the association between postmaterialistic culture and corporate tax-avoidance behavior. We used a proprietary dataset of China tax audits spanning the 2011–2014 period and tested the moderating effect of tax enforcement. We also examined the external validity of our results using a cross-country sample from 21 countries over the 1993–2014 period. Findings Using a proprietary dataset of China tax audits, we found that firms owned by investors from countries with higher postmaterialism values were less likely to engage in tax-avoidance behavior in China. In addition, we found some evidence that the negative association between postmaterialism and tax avoidance is more pronounced when tax enforcement is stronger, indicating that national culture and formal institutions act as complements. To check the external validity of our main results, we further used a cross-country sample from 21 countries over 22 years. The evidence from the cross-country sample was consistent with the findings obtained from the China tax audits setting.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: The aim of The International Journal of Accounting is to advance the academic and professional understanding of accounting theory, policies and practice from the international perspective and viewpoint. The Journal editorial recognizes that international accounting is influenced by a variety of forces, e.g., governmental, political and economic. Thus, the primary criterion for manuscript evaluation is the incremental contribution to international accounting literature and the forces that impact the field. The Journal aims at understanding the present and potential ability of accounting to aid in analyzing and interpreting international economic transactions and the economic consequences of such reporting. These transactions may be within a profit or non-profit environment. The Journal encourages a broad view of the origins and development of accounting with an emphasis on its functions in an increasingly interdependent global economy. The Journal also welcomes manuscripts that help explain current international accounting practices, with related theoretical justifications, and identify criticisms of current policies and practice. Other than occasional commissioned papers or special issues, all the manuscripts published in the Journal are selected by the editors after the normal double-blind refereeing process.
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