What is it about?

To explain the shadow economy in the Baltic states of Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia, this paper evaluates the relationship between the shadow economy and tax morale. Viewing tax morale as a measure of the symmetry between the codified laws and regulations of formal institutions (state morality) and the unwritten socially shared rules of informal institutions (civic morality), the proposition is that the lower the tax morale (i.e., the greater the asymmetry between state morality and civic morality), the greater is the propensity to participate in the shadow economy.

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Why is it important?

To evaluate this, a 2013 survey is reported involving 3,036 face-to-face interviews in these three Baltic nations. Using ordered logistic regression analysis, the finding is that the lower is the tax morale of individuals, population groups and countries, the greater is the propensity to participate in the shadow economy.

Perspectives

The paper then explores the implications of adopting a tax morale approach for theorising and tackling the shadow economy.

Professor Colin C Williams
University of Sheffield

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This page is a summary of: An evaluation of the shadow economy in Baltic states: a tax morale perspective, International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Small Business, January 2016, Inderscience Publishers,
DOI: 10.1504/ijesb.2016.076638.
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