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The $100 Million Nudge: Increasing Tax Compliance of Businesses and the Self-Employed using a Natural Field Experiment / Justin E. Holz, John A. List, Alejandro Zentner, Marvin Cardoza, Joaquin Zentner.
Author
Holz, Justin E.
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Format
Book
Language
English
Published/​Created
Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research 2020.
Description
1 online resource: illustrations (black and white);
Details
Related name
National Bureau of Economic Research
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List, John A.
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Zentner, Alejandro
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Cardoza, Marvin
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Zentner, Joaquin
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Series
Working Paper Series (National Bureau of Economic Research) no. w27666.
[More in this series]
NBER working paper series no. w27666
Summary note
This paper uses a natural field experiment to examine the effectiveness of specific nudges on tax compliance amongst firms and the self-employed in the Dominican Republic. In collaboration with the Dominican Republic's tax authority, we designed messages for more than 28,000 self-employed workers and over 56,000 firms. Leveraging administrative tax data, we find evidence that our nudges (increasing the salience of prison sentences or public disclosure of tax evaders) have large effects on increasing tax compliance, primarily working through the channel of decreasing claimed tax exemptions. Interestingly, we find that firms are more impacted than the self-employed, and that firm size is critically linked to nudge effectiveness: larger firms are considerably more influenced by nudges than smaller firms. We find this latter result noteworthy given the paucity of evidence showing significant behavioral impacts of nudges amongst the largest players in a market. Overall, our messages increased tax revenue by $193 million (roughly 0.23% of the Dominican Republic's GDP in 2018), with over $100 million constituting income that the government would not have received without our field experimental nudges.
Notes
August 2020.
Source of description
Print version record
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