Multiple Misbehaving: Loss Averse and Inattentive to Monetary Incentives
Abstract
We study what determines taxpayers’ deduction behavior when filing tax returns. Preliminary
deficits might be viewed as losses assuming zero preliminary balance as reference point. Swedish taxpayers may escape these losses by claiming deductions after receiving information about the preliminary balance. Furthermore, the Swedish income tax system has a substantial kink (20 percentage points) where the central government tax applies. Taxpayers slightly above the governmental tax kink have substantially higher (standard economic) incentives to claim deductions than taxpayers slightly below the
kink. Using a regression kink and discontinuity approach with individual fixed effects, we study a panel of 4.1 million Swedish taxpayers in 1999 to 2006. We find strong causal effects of preliminary deficits on the probability of claiming deductions. The initial empirical evidence for a kink in deduction probability at the central government threshold, anticipated by standard economic theory, is weaker but significant. However, a more detailed analysis reveals that the kink at the tax threshold is not likely due to the tax
incentives per se. When controlling for the preliminary tax deficit, the kink at the tax
threshold disappears. Taxpayers just above the tax kink are namely more likely to run a preliminary tax deficit than those just below it. Hence, the most plausible explanation also for the kink at the tax threshold is therefore loss aversion and not standard economic incentives. The Swedish taxpayers are thus “misbehaving”, in a Thaler (2015) sense, on two separate margins: they are highly loss averse but surprisingly inattentive to standard monetary incentives.
Other description
JEL: C21,D91,H24,H26
Collections
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Date
2018-04Author
Engström, Per
Nordblom, Katarina
Stefánsson, Arnaldur
Keywords
tax compliance
loss aversion
prospect theory
quasi-experiment
regression kink
regression discontinuity
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
729
Language
eng