Moderating Role of Personality Traits Between Tax Audit, Tax Rate, Tax Penalty and Sales Tax Compliance in Pakistan

Authors

  • Noor ul Sehar Independent Researcher
  • Muhammad Ishfaq* Assistant Professor, Riphah International University, Faisalabad Campus, Punjab, Pakistan
  • Affaf Asghar Butt Assistant Professor, Department of Business Administration University of the Punjab, Gujranwala Campus, Gujranwala, Pakistan
  • Aamer Shahzad Assistant Professor, Department of Commerce University of the Punjab, Gujranwala Campus, Gujranwala, Pakistan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.58661/ijsse.v3i3.208

Keywords:

Sales tax, non-compliance, personality traits, deterrence tool (tax audit, tax rate, and tax penalty)

Abstract

The landscape of Finance in the modern day has become dynamic- with the introduction of behavioural finance, and the possibilities are endless. The study aims to demonstrate the impact of tax audits, tax rates, and tax penalties on sales tax compliance in light of personality traits. To this stage, the effect of personality traits and behavioural trends on sales tax compliance has not been explored thoroughly in Pakistan. In this study, 340 questionnaires were distributed through convenience sampling to the owners-managers of manufacturing and service sector representatives of SMEs operational in Faisalabad, Pakistan. After this, the data collected through the questionnaire were categorically analyzed using SPSS to validate the measurement model and structure. The findings demonstrated the direct positive relationship between tax audit, tax rates, tax penalty, and sales tax compliance. Further, the personality trends of neuroticism reflect a significant impact as a moderator towards tax-compliant behaviour. Policymakers may deploy these findings to enhance sales tax collection by making individualized systems catering to specific behaviours and personality traits to ensure maximum tax compliance. Tax administration authorities should deploy strict policies to deal with the non-compliant behaviour of taxpayers. It will help enhance the tax-to-GDP ratio of Pakistan and will generate more funds for public expenditures.

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Published

2023-07-30

How to Cite

Noor ul Sehar, Muhammad Ishfaq*, Affaf Asghar Butt, & Aamer Shahzad. (2023). Moderating Role of Personality Traits Between Tax Audit, Tax Rate, Tax Penalty and Sales Tax Compliance in Pakistan. International Journal of Social Science & Entrepreneurship, 3(3), 353–372. https://doi.org/10.58661/ijsse.v3i3.208