000 04084nam a2200409Ii 4500
001 9781787564152
003 UtOrBLW
005 20210303084904.0
006 m o d
007 cr un|||||||||
008 181115t20182019enk o 001 0 eng d
020 _a9781787564152 (e-book)
040 _aUtOrBLW
_beng
_erda
_cUtOrBLW
050 4 _aK4460.4
_b.A38 2018
072 7 _aKFF
_2bicssc
072 7 _aBUS027000
_2bisacsh
080 _a340
082 0 4 _a340
_223
245 0 0 _aAdvances in taxation.
_nVol. 25 /
_cedited by John Hasseldine.
264 1 _bEmerald Publishing Limited,
300 _a1 online resource (xii, 206 pages).
490 0 _aAdvances in taxation,
_x1058-7497 ;
_vvolume 25
500 _aIncludes index.
505 0 _aPrelims -- Short selling and corporate tax avoidance -- FIN48 and income tax-based earnings management: evidence from the deferred tax asset valuation allowance -- Dividend tax policy and private-sector research and development spending: a modified perspective on the impact of US 2003 tax reform act on R&D spending -- The effect of gender, political affiliation, and family composition on reasonable compensation decisions: an empirical assist -- Perceived and actual consequences of the foreign account tax compliance act: a survey of Americans living abroad -- The influence of the corporate sector on the effectiveness of tax compliance instruments -- Determinants of enforced tax compliance: empirical evidence from Malaysia -- Tax morale in times of economic depression: the case of Greece -- Index.
520 _aVolume 25 features eight articles. In the lead article, Savannah Guo, Sabrina Chi, and Kirsten Cook examine short selling as one external determinant of corporate tax avoidance and find that short interest is negatively associated with subsequent tax-avoidance levels and this effect is incremental to other factors identified by prior research.Next, Mark Bauman and Cathalene Rogers Bowler examine the effect of FIN48 on earnings management activity, by focusing on changes in the deferred tax asset valuation allowance. In the third article, Anthony Billings, Cheol Lee, and Jaegul Lee study whether the lowering of dividend taxes as part of the U.S. Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 resulted in an increase in dividend payouts at the expense of R&D spending.The fourth article by Brian Dowis and Ted Englebrecht examines reasonable compensation in closely-held corporations and the impact of gender, political affiliation, and family makeup on decisions made in the U.S. Tax Court. Then, a practice-related study by Sonja Pippin, Jeffrey Wong, and Richard Mason reports on a survey of Americans living abroad on the impact of tax rules explicitly designed for these individuals. They find that Americans living abroad experience the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act as negatively impacting their lives.The next three articles in this volume have an international focus. Zakir Akhand investigates the effects of the corporate sector on the effectiveness of selected tax compliance instruments in the context of large Bangladesh corporate taxpayers. K-Rine Chong and Murugesh Arunachalam examine the determinants of enforced tax compliance behaviour of Malaysian citizens with trust in the tax agency assumed to be a mediating variable. Lastly, Bitzenis and Vasileios investigate the effect of the economic downturn in Greece on the factors determining the level of tax morale through primary data from a European Union funded research project on the Greek shadow economy.
588 0 _aPrint version record
650 0 _aTaxation
_xLaw and legislation.
650 7 _aBusiness & Economics
_xFinance
_xGeneral.
_2bisacsh
650 7 _aFinance.
_2bicssc
700 1 _aHasseldine, John,
_eeditor.
776 _z9781787564169
856 4 0 _uhttps://www.emerald.com/insight/publication/doi/10.1108/S1058-7497201825
999 _c29946
_d29946