The role of negative emotions on error and non-compliance 2013-2018

DOI

A controlled laboratory experiment, where we test the impact of a negative emotion environment, as well as the opportunity to misreport/make mistakes, in order to understand the causal effect of negative emotions on the likelihood of error in a real effort task. It has been well documented in the literature that customers experience negative emotions following an unsatisfactory service or even a service failure. Emotions, especially, negative emotions have been shown to affect decision making. It is plausible that by triggering negative emotions, the quality of service may have an impact on customers’ behavior. Negative emotions may adversely impact one’s ability to carry out subsequent tasks, by reducing cognitive ability, making one more prone to errors.Good tax design and administration are central to the functioning of the economy. Taxes are important determinants of economic behaviour, and good implementation can significantly increase economic and social welfare. The role of the Tax Administration Research Centre is to deliver research that enhances tax policy and provides lasting benefit to the economy. There are many research tools that can contribute to this goal but the greatest success will be achieved by combining a range of research methodologies and disciplines. The Centre will unite researchers from two institutions with distinguished reputations for research into tax administration and tax design. Complementary abilities and methodologies will be brought together to address a wide range of intersecting research projects. The research methodologies will include economic modelling, econometric analysis, experimentation, numerical simulation, and qualitative analysis. In undertaking its work the Centre will make extensive use of the HMRC/HMT Datalab to permit innovative empirical work to be undertaken. Some examples of the research projects to be conducted at the Centre are: Risk-based auditing and taxpayers' responses will investigate the reaction of taxpayers to audits, and how this will change the pattern of compliance behaviour. The project will study whether taxpayers learn about the audit strategy over time, and how a risk-based strategy should be updated to take this into account. The project will link with laboratory experiments on compliance and with research on the role of tax advisers. The results will increase the return on resources allocated to auditing. Decomposing the elasticity of taxable income will determine how the response of individuals to taxes summarised by the elasticity of taxable income; can be separated into the channels through which individuals respond (e.g. reduced work effort, increased pension contributions or charitable contributions, moving income abroad, taking income in other forms). The results will enable greater focus of tax interventions and improved design of tax structure. Consequences of pre-population will study the implications of pre-populated tax returns for compliance. If the pre-populated form shows an income level below actual income this might convey an impression to the taxpayer that they can successfully evade. The research will implement an experiment that randomises the allocation of pre-populated returns. The outcome will advise on how best to proceed with the implementation of pre-population. Large business (Intermediaries) relationship with HMRC will use qualitative depth interviews address the extent to which new initiatives have altered working practices in intermediary firms and their clients' businesses, the HMRC understanding of tax avoidance practices, and the appropriateness of current policy strategies currently. This will enhance understanding of the effects of HMRC operational policy and improve administration. Understanding the determinants of customer experience will link HMRC survey data on customer experience with objective measures of service delivery standards, third-party information, and tax return data in Datalab. The linked data will be used to analyse the systematic determinants of subjective customer experience and will show which aspects of HMRC delivery generate a positive customer experience, and which do not. The Centre will enhance tax administration and tax design. It has ambitious plans to become the leading international centre with a central role in research and in building research capability in tax analysis through the training of PhD students and training of research staff.

We invited 192 people from a pool of volunteers to take part in an incentivised experiment. All participants were undergraduate students. 175 participants turned up for the sessions. For more information, see the 'DataCollectionMethod' document.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-853775
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=5826d1ba6c5e978eb7a225e7ee6e9e457726f4da5152b9c1677e167598c62e65
Provenance
Creator Fonseca, M, University of Exeter
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2019
Funding Reference Economic and Social Research Council
Rights Miguel Fonseca, University of Exeter; The Data Collection is available to any user without the requirement for registration for download/access.
OpenAccess true
Representation
Language English
Resource Type Numeric
Discipline Economics; Psychology; Social and Behavioural Sciences
Spatial Coverage United Kingdom