This past Monday, Julie Cullen presented her (coauthored)
paper, “Political Alignment and Tax Evasion," at the colloquium. (I had to put off blogging about it due to my
travel earlier this week.) It
intriguingly finds evidence (from IRS tax data) suggesting that people may
evade income tax more when they are politically opposed to the president.
Pretty much all of the effect comes from income that
is reported on Schedules C and E regarding income that is subject to neither
withholding nor information reporting.
Since evasion obviously can’t be observed directly (or at least, certainly
not through tax returns), it’s based on
the size of the tax gap.
Also, they obviously they can’t link tax evasion to individual
returns based on people’s (unknown) political views. So it’s based on county-level data. What they find is that, when a county has a
strong partisan lean in presidential election voting, the tax gap seems to be
bigger when a president of the other party is in office, as opposed to one of
the same party as that favored by the voters in that county. But the paper has a lot of sophisticated
controls that push one towards accepting the conclusion that people evade tax
more when they oppose the politics and policies of the current president.
Obviously, there is no data in the paper regarding tax
returns filed during the tenure of the current president. From other information in the paper I strongly
surmise (although the authors do not say) that its findings are driven mainly
by reduced tax compliance from Republicans when there are Democratic
presidents, rather than the reverse. This surmise reflects, for example, the fact
that there is an overall Republican lean to people who have the flexibility to
cheat more by reason of having a lot of Schedule C and E income as to which
there is no third-party reporting backup.
Leaving aside that aspect, one could regard the paper’s
main finding as either (a) so obviously true that it is unsurprising, or (b) so
counter-intuitive and surprising that one wonders if it can actually be true.
Why unsurprising?
We know from past research that attitudes towards government affect tax compliance,
and we know that partisan loyalties affect attitudes towards a particular government,
so via transitivity it seemingly had to be true.
Why
surprising? Well, the implication here
is that people who are reporting cash income add or drop a few hundred dollars
(say) from the amount that they report just because George W. Bush or else
Obama happens to be president and they like/dislike this particular individual
and his administration. That’s a
striking thought when one ponders it at the ground level, as something
that happens (at least in the aggregate) case by case.
A possible
payoff for policymakers would be that, purely on grounds of maximizing the
revenue yield relative to the cost of audits, Democratic presidents should
audit people in “red” counties more, and Republican presidents should audit
people in “blue” counties more. However,
this is unlikely to be considered an appealing takeaway for policymakers. So what it mainly does, within the tax
literature on compliance, is less a matter of providing useful policy payoffs than
of fleshing out our understanding of taxpayer behavior (i.e., regarding the
relevance of “tax morale” motives that are distinct from the Allingham-Sandmo
picture of financial optimization subject to risk aversion).
But it also
contributes to the political science literature, where the voting paradox
suggests that voters’ behavior must reflect consumption / expressive motives
rather than involving rational choice relative to the question of who will win
the election (since one’s time has value and one can only infinitesimally
affect the likely outcome).
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