Prelims
ISBN: 978-1-78973-294-8, eISBN: 978-1-78973-293-1
ISSN: 1058-7497
Publication date: 22 October 2019
Citation
(2019), "Prelims", Advances in Taxation (Advances in Taxation, Vol. 26), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xiv. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1058-749720190000026001
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2019 Emerald Publishing Limited
Half Title Page
ADVANCES IN TAXATION
Series Page
ADVANCES IN TAXATION
Series Editor: John Hasseldine
Recent Volumes:
Volumes 1–3: | Edited by Sally M. Jones |
Volumes 4 and 5: | Edited by Jerold J. Stern |
Volumes 6–16: | Edited by Thomas M. Porcano |
Volumes 17 and 18: | Edited by Suzanne Luttman |
Volumes 19–21: | Edited by Toby Stock |
Volumes 22–25: | Edited by John Hasseldine |
Title Page
ADVANCES IN TAXATION VOLUME 26
ADVANCES IN TAXATION
EDITED BY
JOHN HASSELDINE
University of New Hampshire, USA
United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India – Malaysia – China
Copyright Page
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First edition 2019
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A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN: 978-1-78973-294-8 (Print)
ISBN: 978-1-78973-293-1 (Online)
ISBN: 978-1-78973-295-5 (Epub)
ISSN: 1058-7497 (Series)
About the Editor
Since 2011, Dr John Hasseldine has been a Professor of Accounting and Taxation in the Peter T. Paul College of Business and Economics at the University of New Hampshire. Previously he was a Chair and Head of the Accounting and Finance Department at the University of Nottingham Business School. John, a Kiwi, qualified as a Chartered Accountant in New Zealand and is a Fellow of the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (FCCA) based in London.
John has served on three government committees in the United Kingdom and was a contributor to the Mirrlees Review of the UK tax system conducted by the Institute of Fiscal Studies. He has been an external expert at the International Monetary Fund, a Visiting Professor at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, and a Keynote Speaker at several international tax conferences. He travels widely, speaking at national and global conferences, including one on VAT organized by the OECD, World Bank and IMF, and a conference on dealing with the national tax gap held at the US Library of Congress in Washington, DC. He is a coauthor of Comparative Taxation: Why Tax Systems Differ (Fiscal Publications, 2017), and an International Fellow at the University of Exeter Tax Administration Research Centre.
John received his PhD in Accounting in 1997 from the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University-Bloomington, and his Master of Commerce in Accounting and Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.
List of Contributors
B. Anthony Billings | Wayne State University, USA |
M. Catherine Cleaveland | Kennesaw State University, USA |
Lynn Comer Jones | Georgia State University, USA |
Kathryn K. Epps† | Kennesaw State University, USA |
Jennifer Howard | California State University Long Beach, USA |
Fany Inasius | Bina Nusantara University, Indonesia |
Chansog (Francis) Kim | Stony Brook University – State University of New York, USA |
Cheol Lee | Wayne State University, USA |
Norman Massel | Louisiana State University, USA |
Mohammad Nurunnabi | University of Oxford, UK; Prince Sultan University, Saudi Arabia |
Danie Schutte | North-West University, South Africa |
Charles Swenson | University of Southern California, USA |
Pieter Van der Zwan | North-West University, South Africa |
Editorial Board
John Hasseldine, Editor
University of New Hampshire, USA
Kenneth Anderson
University of Tennessee, USA
Bryan Cloyd
Lehigh University, USA
Anthony Curatola
Drexel University, USA
Chris Evans
University of New South Wales Sydney, Australia
Pete Frischmann
Oregon State University, USA
Norman Gemmell
Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Kevin Holland
Cardiff University, UK
Khondkar Karim
University of Massachusetts Lowell, USA
Beth Kern
Indiana University-South Bend, USA
Erich Kirchler
University of Vienna, Austria
Stephen Liedtka
Villanova University, USA
Lynne Oats
University of Exeter, UK
Alan Macnaughton
University of Waterloo, Canada
Amin Mawani
York University, Canada
Janet Meade
University of Houston, USA
Emer Mulligan
National University of Ireland Galway, Ireland
Grant Richardson
Macquarie University, Australia
Robert Ricketts
Texas Tech University, USA
Michael Roberts
University of Colorado-Denver, USA
Timothy Rupert
Northeastern University, USA
David Ryan
Temple University, USA
Adrian Sawyer
University of Canterbury, New Zealand
Toby Stock
Ohio University, USA
Michael Walpole
University of New South Wales Sydney, Australia
Marty Wartick
University of Northern Iowa, USA
Christoph Watrin
University of Muenster, Germany
Le (Emily) Xu
University of New Hampshire, USA
Introduction
Tax researchers have an important role to play in conducting and publishing rigorous quality research in the uncertain times facing the world’s tax systems. There are many research questions to be addressed and Advances in Taxation invites submissions on a broad range of tax topics. I wish to thank the editorial board for their continued support. They have been called upon to promote Advances in Taxation and to engage in the reviewing process. And, importantly, I am also pleased to thank the 14 ad-hoc expert reviewers listed below for their valuable and timely reviewing activity during 2018–2019.
Zakir Akhand (University of Exeter)
May Bao (University of New Hampshire)
Noraza Bt Mat Udin (Universiti Utara Malaysia)
Fred Coleman (Bowling Green State University)
Lisa Eiler (University of Montana)
Jonathan Farrar (Ryerson University)
Bill Harden (University of North Carolina Greensboro)
Brian Huels (University of Wisconsin – Whitewater)
Susan Jurney (Oklahoma City University)
Ilinza Penning (University of Pretoria)
Tom Schultz (Western Michigan University)
Qian Song (Cardiff University)
Charles Swenson (University of Southern California)
Recep Yucedogru (Bulent Ecevit University)
In Volume 26, there are seven chapters. In the lead chapter, Anthony Billings, Francis Kim, and Cheol Lee examine whether APB 23–asserting firms that declared their foreign earnings as permanently reinvested abroad are less likely to repatriate those foreign earnings under the American Jobs Creation Act (AJCA) of 2004, compared with similar non-asserting firms. The authors show that asserting firms are more likely to repatriate their foreign earnings than non-asserting firms and also find that the probability of making an election to repatriate permanently invested foreign earnings under the AJCA of 2004 is higher for firms with nonbinding foreign tax credit (FTC) limitations that have made an APB 23 declaration to permanently invest foreign earnings abroad.
Next, Howard and Massel use financial statement disclosures of reductions in reserves due to a lapse in the statute of limitations to investigate whether Schedule UTP has been an effective audit tool to the IRS. They find that the probability of a Lapse is 3.4 percent lower after Schedule UTP. However, this result is driven by domestic firms; they do not find evidence that Schedule UTP has been effective in the audit of multinational firms.
In the third chapter, Swenson examines the employment impacts of US Environmental Protection Agency brownfield grant sites. Using establishment data, employment within close proximity to such sites is found to increase during cleanup periods following grants. The employment increase was from non-brownfield establishments, that is, a “spillover” effect. These employment effects were concentrated in certain industries.
In the fourth chapter, Cleaveland, Comer Jones, and Epps conduct a 2x2 experiment using nonprofessional investor proxies to examine the effects of Compliance Assurance Process (CAP) participation and corporate tax risk profile on judgments about financial statement credibility. Their results suggest both CAP program participation and tax risk influence nonprofessional investors’ perceptions of the certainty of the income tax provision, and tax risk also influences nonprofessional investors’ perception of the accuracy of the income tax provision.
The next three chapters in this volume have an international focus. Inasius investigates whether the impacts of power and trust dimensions previously found in developed countries also exist in Indonesia. Survey results show that trust significantly influences voluntary tax compliance, but neither trust nor power promotes enforced tax compliance. Nurunnabi then examines the determinants of tax evasion in Bangladesh and how the interests of state actors influence tax evasion. Lastly, in a practice-related contribution, Schutte and Van der Zwain evaluate the effectiveness of the turnover tax system in South Africa, finding that turnover tax is not necessarily beneficial for small business.
John Hasseldine
Editor, Advances in Taxation
- Prelims
- Are Earnings Repatriation Elections under the 2004 American Jobs Creation Act Influenced by APB 23 Declarations?
- The Effectiveness of Schedule UTP: A Comparison of Multinational and Domestic Firms
- Empirical Evidence on Employment Effects of EPA Brownfield Grants and Tax Incentives
- Nonprofessional Investors’ Perceptions of Real-time Corporate Tax Audits
- Voluntary and Enforced Tax Compliance: Evidence from Small and Medium-sized Enterprises in Indonesia
- Political Influence and Tax Evasion in Bangladesh: What Went Wrong?
- Turnover Tax Relief in South Africa: Evidence from the SARS-NT Panel