Scandinavian Working Papers in Economics

Discussion Papers,
Statistics Norway, Research Department

No 975: Public disclosure of tax information. Compliance tool or social network?

Daniel Reck (), Joel Slemrod () and Trine Vattø ()
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Trine Vattø: Statistics Norway

Abstract: We conduct the first-ever study of actual searches done in a public tax disclosure system, analyzing about one million searches done in 2014 and 2015 in Norway. We characterize the social network these searches comprise, including its degree of homophily and reciprocation, and the demographics of targets and searchers. About one-fourth of searches occur within identifiable household and employment networks. Most searchers target people similar to themselves—homophily in network parlance—but young, low-income searchers also target older, successful people and celebrities. A causal research design based on the timing of searches relative to tax filing uncovers no evidence that, upon discovering they were targeted, targets subsequently increase their reported income. The evidence suggests that social comparisons motivate the bulk of searches rather than tax compliance. However, public disclosure may deter evasion even when compliance-motivated searches are rare in equilibrium.

Keywords: Public disclosure; social network; tax compliance

JEL-codes: H26; D83; D85

55 pages, March 2022

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