Research Paper

Related examinations and tax compliance

  • By Puneet Arora
    Assistant Professor
    Co-Authors
    Seiyoun Kim, Leonard Davis Institute Of Health Economics, University Of Pennsylvania
    Journal : Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics
    Publisher : Elsevier

Article citation: Kim, S., & Arora, P. (2025). Related examinations and tax compliance. Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics114, 102326.

Abstract
One of the Internal Revenue Services' methods for audit is to pick individuals engaged in transactions with other taxpayers whose tax returns were selected for audit. Such related examination in the audit procedure introduces an externality where one's actions can potentially harm others. It can induce a different tax compliance behavior compared to the purely random audit mechanism. We propose a Simplified Related Examinations (SRE) audit mechanism and study its effectiveness against the Random Audit (RA) mechanism using a laboratory experiment. Our findings reveal that the SRE treatment significantly increases overall tax compliance and tax compliance at the extensive margin. We also analyze how varying factors like social distance, group size, and audit rate impact this effect.