"ChEATAX is advancing knowledge by addressing four long-standing gaps in the literature:
1) The magnitude of tax evasion in Italy varies greatly between the North and the South (Santoro, 2010). However, previous experiments on tax compliance have been carried out in the North of Italy (mainly in Bologna, Milan and Rome). ChEATAX is the first cross-national experimental project that extends the analysis to the South of Italy.
2) Previous experiments on tax compliance have been carried out in the US, the UK, Sweden, and Italy (e.g. Andrighetto et al., 2016). No previous experimental studies have investigated tax morale in Denmark. ChEATAX is the first experimental project to test whether tax morale differ between Denmark and Italy.
3) In the standard model and cross-national experiments on tax evasion, the taxpayer is treated as an isolated expected utility maximizer. ChEATAX extends the standard analysis of individual compliance behavior to explore how individual decisions are affected by their beliefs about others’ compliance choices in a cross-cultural dimension.
4) In addition, ChEATAX highlights and analyses cross-cultural differences in attitudes towards immigration and gender as crucial dimensions influencing individual tax compliance behavior (Finseraas, 2008).
Regarding the impact of the project, ChEATAX’s findings can be useful for policy-makers. The first results is that subjects – even if coming from different locations – react in a predictable manner to changes in the parameter of taxation (tax rate, redistribution, audit rate). Thus, ChEATAX basically encourages policies which seek to increase detection of tax evasion. In addition, ChEATAX’s results suggest that other factors shape individuals’ tax behavior, including gender, beliefs about others’ behavior, and attitudes towards who should receive tax-funded benefits.
Andrighetto et al (2016). Are some countries more honest than others? Evidence from a tax compliance experiment in Sweden and Italy. Frontiers in Psychology.
Finseraas, H. (2008). Immigration and preferences for redistribution: An empirical analysis of European survey data. Comparative European Politics, 6(4), 407-431.
Zhang et al (2016). ""Willing to Pay?"" Tax Compliance in Britain and Italy: An Experimental Analysis. PloS one, 11(2).
Santoro, A. (2010). L'evasione Fiscale. Bologna: Mulino."