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Journal ArticleDOI

Factors affecting consumers’ participation in consumption tax evasion

TLDR
In this paper, the authors investigated the extent to which consumers recognize participation in consumption tax evasion (CTE) as an ethical issue and the impact of moral recognition on consumer intention to participate.
Abstract
This study aims to investigate the extent to which consumers recognize participation in consumption tax evasion (CTE) as an ethical issue and the impact of moral recognition on consumer intention to participate. It also explores the role of religiosity and attitude toward government in the ethical decision-making process of consumers.,The model was tested using the structural equation modeling approach over 128 responses collected through the mail survey.,The results of the study suggest that attitude towards government and religiosity influences the consumers’ intention to participate in CTE. The negative attitude toward government enhances the intention to participate in CTE. Religiosity negatively influences the intention to participate in CTE and makes people recognize participation in CTE as a moral issue.,There is a need to explore the impact of other factors such as social norms and personality traits on the consumer decision-making to participate in CTE.,This study indicates that the even when people recognize participation in CTE as morally wrong, they do not have intentions to avoid such behavior because of their attitude toward government. Governments need to improve their image among consumers to reduce CTE. Also, there is a need to launch social marketing campaigns to move consumers from just recognizing moral issues in CTE to forming intentions to resolve those issues.,Earlier studies have explored the moral issue related to tax evasion in a context where an individual has directly participated in such an act, whereas this study explores the ethical aspect in the situation where consumers play an indirect role in tax evasion, i.e. CTE. In the context of participation in CTE, this study points out that the consumers recognize their indirect participation in CTE as a moral issue, but they lack the intention to curb such behavior. Further, no earlier study has explored the impact of religiosity and attitude toward government in such indirect participation in tax evasion.

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Local autonomy, tax morale, and the shadow economy

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed the relationship between local autonomy and tax morale and found that there is a positive (negative) relationship between autonomy and the size of the shadow economy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Religious influences in unrestrained consumer behaviour

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the influence of religiosity on two unrestrained buying constructs; impulsive and compulsive buying and found that this relationship for extrinsic religiosity is mediated by susceptibility to interpersonal influence and moderated by long-term orientation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Factors Influencing Intention to Participate in Tax Evasion: Individual Perspectives

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the determinants that influence participation in tax evasion by individuals and found that the government may design policies to prevent tax evasion from any religions or belief and provide a better solution to encourage the taxpayers to obey and support the government's decisions.
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Faktory daňových úniků v zemích Visegradské čtyřky

TL;DR: In this paper, the European Values Study (EVSVSS) was used to evaluate moralku obyvatel of Slovenska, Maďarska, Slovenia, and Ceske republice.
References
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Evaluating Structural Equation Models with Unobservable Variables and Measurement Error

TL;DR: In this paper, the statistical tests used in the analysis of structural equation models with unobservable variables and measurement error are examined, and a drawback of the commonly applied chi square test, in additit...
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Structural equation modeling and regression: guidelines for research practice

TL;DR: The article presents a running example which analyzes the same dataset via three very different statistical techniques and compares two classes of SEM: covariance-based SEM and partial-least-squaresbased SEM, and discusses linear regression models and guidelines as to when SEM techniques and when regression techniques should be used.
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The Religious Commitment Inventory--10: Development, Refinement, and Validation of a Brief Scale for Research and Counseling.

TL;DR: The RCI-10 (Religious Commitment Inventory-10) as mentioned in this paper was developed for 6 studies and used in 6 studies with a sample size of 155, 132, and 150 college students; 240 Christian church-attending married adults; 468 undergraduates including (among others) Buddhists, Muslims, Hindus, and non-religious (n = 117).
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Enforced versus voluntary tax compliance: The “slippery slope” framework

TL;DR: In this paper, a framework for tax compliance is suggested in which both the power of tax authorities and trust in the tax authorities are relevant dimensions for understanding enforced and voluntary compliance, and the dynamic interactions between power and trust are considered.
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Religiosity and Ethical Behavior in Organizations: A Symbolic Interactionist Perspective

TL;DR: This paper found that religious role expectations, internalized as a religious self-identity, can influence ethical behavior in business, but the relationship of religious role expectation to behavior is moderated by religious identity salience and religious motivational orientation.
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