Tax evasion from a policy perspective :
By: DENISON, Dwight Denison, Ph.D.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: Malden, MA : Blackwell Publishers, mar./apr.2000Public Administration Review: PAR 60, 2, p. 163-173Abstract: In recent years, many state legislatures have proposed, considered, and adopted legislation intended to thwart fuel tax evasion. Despite the recent political activity of state legislatures to increase fuel tax compliance, there is relatively little researc examining the evasion of excise taxes in general or the motor-fuel tax in particular. This article examines the issues of fuel tax evason from a policy perspective. We discuss the vulnerability of the fuel tax to evasion and examine how state legislatures in the southern region have responded to the tax evasion issue. We focus the examination on four major intitiatives implemented at the federal level in four broad policy areas: tax administration, penalities and punishments, liability, and visibility and enforcement. These findings provide important insigt for developing new strategies to enhance compliance to the fuel tax in particular and excise taxes in general. Furthermore ], we dicuss how issues of fuel tax compliance can be extended to other compliance issues such as Medicare fraudItem type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Periódico | Biblioteca Graciliano Ramos | Periódico | Not for loan |
In recent years, many state legislatures have proposed, considered, and adopted legislation intended to thwart fuel tax evasion. Despite the recent political activity of state legislatures to increase fuel tax compliance, there is relatively little researc examining the evasion of excise taxes in general or the motor-fuel tax in particular. This article examines the issues of fuel tax evason from a policy perspective. We discuss the vulnerability of the fuel tax to evasion and examine how state legislatures in the southern region have responded to the tax evasion issue. We focus the examination on four major intitiatives implemented at the federal level in four broad policy areas: tax administration, penalities and punishments, liability, and visibility and enforcement. These findings provide important insigt for developing new strategies to enhance compliance to the fuel tax in particular and excise taxes in general. Furthermore ], we dicuss how issues of fuel tax compliance can be extended to other compliance issues such as Medicare fraud
Public administration review PAR
March/April 2000 Volume 60 Number 2
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