The Difference of Compliance Cost Before and After Using E-Filing Application on Company Taxpayers E-Filing User

Vania Wimayo

Abstract


The purpose of this study was to determine differences in compliance cost incurred before and after the use of E-Filing applications for corporate tax payers E-Filing users.E-Filing Tax Return is a reporting system created by the DGT which makes it easy for taxpayers in the manufacture and delivery of Tax Return report to the Director General of Taxation. The hypothesis in this study was tested using the Wilcoxon test match pairs. The type of data used in this study is quantitative data. The research method used is a survey and the instrument used to collect data is a questionnaire. The results show that compliance cost after the use of e-filing in contrast to earlier, where the compliance cost will be lower.


Keywords


e-filling; compliance cost; tax payers

Full Text:

PDF

References


Aziz, SA, and Idris, KM. (2014). Does design matter in tax e-filing acceptance?. International Conference on Accounting Studies. Kuala Lumpur: Elsevier Ltd. 451-457

Azmi, A., Sapiei, NS, and Mustapha, MZ (2016). SMEs' Tax Compliance Costs and IT Adoption: The Case of a Value Added Tax. International Journal of Accounting Information Systems. 1-13.

Bruner, DM, D'Attoma, J., & Steinmo, S. (2017). The Role of Gender in the Provision of Public Goods Through Tax Compliance. Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics. 45-55.

Carter, L., Schaupp, LC, & McBride, ME. (2011). The US e-File Initiative: An Investigation of the antecedents to Adoption from the Individual Taxpayers' Perspective. E-Service Journal. 2-19.

Chaouali, W., Yahia, IB, and Charfeddine, L. (2016). Understanding Citizens' Adoption of E-Filing in Developing Countries: An Empirical Investigation. Journal of High Technology Management Research. 161-176.

Chen, JV, Jubilado, RJ, & Capistrano, EP. (2015). Factors Affecting Online Tax Filling An Application of the IS Success Model and Trust Theory. Computers in Human Behavior. 251-262.

Christian, CR, & Alm, J. (2014). Empathy, Sympathy, and Tax Compliance. Journal of Economic Psychology. 62-82.

Eichfelder, S., & Schorn, M. (2009). Tax compliance costs: A business administration perspective. 1-32.

Victoria, BC, Palil, MR, & Maelah, R. (2017). Perception on justice, trust and tax compliance behavior in Malaysia. Kasetsart Journal of Social Sciences. 226-232.

Fatih Yılmaz, and Jacqueline Coolidge. (2013). Can E-Filing Tax Compliance Reduce Costs in Developing Countries? The World Bank Investment Climate Department of International Trade and Investment Unit.

Fu, JR, Farn, CK, & Chao, WP. (2006). Acceptance of Electronic Tax Filling: A Study of Taxpayer Intentions. Information & Management, 109-126.

Ibrahim, I. (2014). The Compliance Time Costs of Malaysian Personal Income Tax System: E-filers vs. Manual-filers. International Conference on Accounting Studies (pp. 522-527). Kuala Lumpur: Elsevier Ltd.

Kotakorpi, K., & Laamanen, J. (2016). Prelled income tax returns and tax compliance: Evidence from a natural experiment.

Lisi, G. (2014). The Interaction Between Trust and Power: Effects on Tax Compliance and Macroeconomic Implications. Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics. 24-33.

Lisi, G. (2015). Tax Morale, Tax Compliance and the Optimal Tax Policy. Economic Analysis and Policy, 27-32.

Mangoting, Y., Sukoharsono, EG, & Rosidi. (2015). Developing a Model of Tax Compliance Perspective from Social Contract: mitigating the Tax Evasion. 2nd Global Conference on Business and Social Science. Bali: Elsevier Ltd. 966-971

Mendoza, JP, Wielhouwer, JL, & Kirchler, E. (2017). The Effect of backfiring on Tax Compliance Auditing. Journal of Economic Psychology. 284-294.

Mustapha, B., & Sheikh Obid, SB (2014). Tax Service Quality: The mediating Effect of Perceived Ease of Use of the Online Tax System. Global Conference on Business and Social Science. Kuala Lumpur: Elsevier Ltd.

Pappadá, F., & Zylberberg, Y. (2017). Austerity and Tax Compliance. European Economic Review. 506-524.

Pippin, S., & Tosun, M. (2014). Electronic Tax Filing in the United States: An Analysis of Possible Success factors. Electronic Journal of e-Government Vol. 12. 22-38.

Santhanamerya, T., & Ramayah, T. (2012). Continued Usage Intention of E-Filing System in Malaysia: The Role of Optimism Bias. International Congress on Interdisciplinary Business and Social Science. Elsevier Ltd. 397-403

Savitri, E., & Musfialdy. (2015). The Effect of Taxpayer Awareness, Socialization Tax, Tax Penalties, Compliance Cost at Taxpayer Compliance with Service Quality as mediating variable. 3rd Global Conference on Business and Social Science. Kuala Lumpur: Elsevier Ltd. 682-687

Schaupp, LC, Carter, L., & Mcbride, ME. (2010). E-File Adoption: A Study of US Taxpayers' Intentions. Computers in Human Behavior. 636-644.

Syed Kashif Raza Zaidi, Cassy Daniels Henderson, and Gaurav Gupta. (2017). The Moderating Effect of Culture on E-Filing Taxes: Evidence from India. Journal of Accounting in Emerging Economies. 134-152.

Warren, N. (2016). E-Filing and Compliance Risk: Evidence From Australian Personal Income Tax deductions. 12th International Conference on Tax Administration. Sydney. 1-21




DOI: https://doi.org/10.15408/akt.v12i1.11645 Abstract - 0 PDF - 0

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.




Published by
Department of Accounting, Faculty of Economic and Business,
Syarif Hidayatullah State Islamic University

Jl. Ir. H. Juanda no 95, Ciputat 15412, Tangerang Selatan, Banten, Indonesia
Phone:+62(21) 7493318, Fax.: +62 (21) 7496006. e-Mail: akuntabilitas@uinjkt.ac.id 

View My Stats License

This work is licensed under CC BY-SA

Â