TY - BOOK AU - Bergman,Marcelo TI - Tax Evasion and the Rule of Law in Latin America: The Political Culture of Cheating and Compliance in Argentina and Chile SN - 9780271058818 AV - KH917 .B47 2009 U1 - 345.82/02338 22 PY - 2021///] CY - University Park, PA : PB - Penn State University Press, KW - Tax administration and procedure KW - Argentina KW - Chile KW - Tax evasion KW - Law and legislation KW - Taxation KW - Argentinien KW - Taxpayer compliance KW - POLITICAL SCIENCEĀ / Comparative Politics KW - bisacsh N1 - Frontmatter --; CONTENTS --; FIGURES AND TABLES --; PREFACE AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS --; Introduction --; 1 Compliance and enforcement --; 2 Measuring tax compliance in Chile and Argentina --; 3 Taxpayers' perceptions of government enforcement --; 4 General deterrence: impunity and sanctions in taxation --; 5 Specific deterrence and its effects on individual compliance --; 6 The role of trust, reciprocity, and solidarity in tax compliance --; 7 Social mechanisms in tax evasion and tax compliance --; Conclusion: tax compliance and the law --; Appendix a: on the data --; Appendix b: a game theory approach to the logic of tax compliance --; Appendix c: a simulative game: the effects of enforcement --; Appendix d: the state, the law, and the rule of law --; REFERENCES --; INDEX; restricted access N2 - Few tasks are as crucial for the future of democracy in Latin America-and, indeed, in other underdeveloped areas of the world-as strengthening the rule of law and reforming the system of taxation.In this book, Marcelo Bergman shows how success in getting citizens to pay their taxes is related intimately to the social norms that undergird the rule of law. The threat of legal sanctions is itself insufficient to motivate compliance, he argues. That kind of deterrence works best when citizens already have other reasons to want to comply, based on their beliefs about what is fair and about how their fellow citizens are behaving. The problem of ";free riding,"; which arises when cheaters can count on enough suckers to pay their taxes so they can avoid doing so and still benefit from the government's supply of public goods, cannot be reversed just by stringent law, because the success of governmental enforcement ultimately depends on the social equilibrium that predominates in each country. Culture and state effectiveness are inherently linked.Using a wealth of new data drawn from his own multidimensional research involving game theory, statistical models, surveys, and simulations, Bergman compares Argentina and Chile to show how, in two societies that otherwise share much in common, the differing traditions of rule of law explain why so many citizens evade paying taxes in Argentina-and why, in Chile, most citizens comply with the law. In the concluding chapter, he draws implications for public policy from the empirical findings and generalizes his argument to other societies in Africa, Asia, and Eastern Europe UR - https://doi.org/10.1515/9780271058818?locatt=mode:legacy UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9780271058818 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9780271058818/original ER -