Don’t blame the Messenger. A Field Experiment on Delivery Methods for Increasing Tax Compliance

Working papers in socioeconomic research

Don’t blame the Messenger. A Field Experiment on Delivery Methods for Increasing Tax Compliance

Publication date: 2015-11-01

Authors: Ortega, Daniel ; Scartascini, Carlos

The effect of different delivery mechanisms for increasing tax compliance has not been evaluated so far. This study conducts a field experiment in Colombia that varies the way the National Tax Agency contacts taxpayers on payments due for income, value added, and wealth taxes. More than 20,000 were randomly assigned to a control or one of three delivery mechanisms. Results indicate large and highly significant effects, as well as sizable differences across delivery methods. A personal visit by an inspector is more effective than a letter or an email, conditional on delivery; which has several relevant academic and policy implications.

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Technical sheet

Language: en

Country / Region: Colombia

Format: pdf

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Unless otherwise stated, the licence for the item is described as CC-BY-NC

Cite publication

Ortega, Daniel; Scartascini, Carlos. (2015). Don’t blame the Messenger. A Field Experiment on Delivery Methods for Increasing Tax Compliance. Caracas: CAF

Authors

Ortega, Daniel

No. of publications 24

Scartascini, Carlos

No. of publications 1

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