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Do IRS audits deter corporate tax avoidance?

Version 2 2024-06-05, 04:37
Version 1 2022-10-31, 01:12
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-05, 04:37 authored by JL Hoopes, D Mescall, Jeff Pittman
ABSTRACTWe extend research on the determinants of corporate tax avoidance to include the role of Internal Revenue Service (IRS) monitoring. Our evidence from large samples implies that U.S. public firms undertake less aggressive tax positions when tax enforcement is stricter. Reflecting its first-order economic impact on firms, our coefficient estimates imply that raising the probability of an IRS audit from 19 percent (the 25th percentile in our data) to 37 percent (the 75th percentile) increases their cash effective tax rates, on average, by nearly two percentage points, which amounts to a 7 percent increase in cash effective tax rates. These results are robust to controlling for firm size and time, which determine our primary proxy for IRS enforcement, in different ways; specifying several alternative dependent and test variables; and confronting potential endogeneity with instrumental variables and panel data estimations, among other techniques.JEL Classifications: M40; G34; G32; H25.

History

Journal

Accounting Review

Volume

87

Pagination

1603-1639

ISSN

0001-4826

eISSN

1558-7967

Language

en

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

5

Publisher

American Accounting Association

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