Prelims

Advances in Taxation

ISBN: 978-1-78635-002-2, eISBN: 978-1-78635-001-5

ISSN: 1058-7497

Publication date: 18 December 2016

Citation

(2016), "Prelims", Advances in Taxation (Advances in Taxation, Vol. 23), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xii. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1058-749720160000023008

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017 Emerald Group Publishing Limited


Half Title

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
Volume 17 and 18: Edited by Suzanne Luttman
Volumes 19–21: Edited by Toby Stock
Volume 22: Edited by John Hasseldine

Title Page

ADVANCES IN TAXATION VOLUME 23

ADVANCES IN TAXATION

EDITED BY

JOHN HASSELDINE

Paul College of Business and Economics, Department of Accounting and Finance, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, USA

United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India – Malaysia – China

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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First edition 2017

Copyright © 2017 Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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ISBN: 978-1-78635-002-2

ISSN: 1058-7497 (Series)

List of Contributors

Fadi Alasfour Al-Ahliyya Amman University, Jordan
Roberta Bampton Leeds Beckett University, UK
William D. Brink Miami University, USA
John Hasseldine University of New Hampshire, USA
Kimberly Key Auburn University, USA
Yaron Lahav Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel
Teresa Lightner University of North Texas, USA
Bing Luo San Francisco State University, USA
Emer Mulligan National University of Ireland Galway, Ireland
Lynne Oats University of Exeter, UK
Diana Onu University of Exeter, UK
Thomas M. Porcano Miami University, USA
Galla Salganik-Shoshan Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel
Martin Samy Leeds Beckett University, UK

Editorial Board

  • John Hasseldine, Editor

    University of New Hampshire, USA

  • Kenneth Anderson

    University of Tennessee, USA

  • Bryan Cloyd

    Lehigh University, USA

  • Anthony P. Curatola

    Drexel University, USA

  • Charles Enis

    Pennsylvania State University, USA

  • Pete Frischmann

    Oregon State University, USA

  • Norman Gemmell

    Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand

  • Peggy A. Hite

    Indiana University-Bloomington, USA

  • Kevin Holland

    Cardiff University, UK

  • Khondkar Karim

    University of Massachusetts Lowell, USA

  • Beth B. Kern

    Indiana University-South Bend, USA

  • Erich Kirchler

    University of Vienna, Austria

  • Stephen Liedtka

    Villanova University, USA

  • Alan Macnaughton

    University of Waterloo, Canada

  • Amin Mawani

    York University, Canada

  • Janet A. Meade

    University of Houston, USA

  • Emer Mulligan

    National University of Ireland Galway, Ireland

  • Lynne Oats

    University of Exeter, UK

  • Grant Richardson

    University of Adelaide, Australia

  • Robert Ricketts

    Texas Tech University, USA

  • Michael L. Roberts

    University of Colorado-Denver, USA

  • Timothy Rupert

    Northeastern University, USA

  • David Ryan

    Temple University, USA

  • Toby Stock

    Ohio University, USA

  • Marty Wartick

    University of Northern Iowa, USA

  • Christoph Watrin

    University of Muenster, Germany

Introduction: Publishing Quality Tax Research

As signaled in Volume 22 one of my goals is for Advances in Taxation to have a greater international exposure. This means carrying more articles with international implications, authored from any country. However, it is critical that we continue the tradition of publishing high quality tax research. To this end, I reiterate that Advances in Taxation will continue to publish, quality North-American tax research and that from other jurisdictions providing it is of broad interest to our readers.

I wish to thank the editorial board for their continued support. They have been called upon to promote AIT and to engage in the reviewing process. Many have again provided wise counsel for this volume. Apart from the editorial board, I am also pleased to thank the ad hoc reviewers listed below for their valuable and timely reviewing activity during 2015–2016.

  • May Bao (University of New Hampshire)

    Jonathan Farrar (Ryerson University)

    Brian Huels (Rockford University)

    Teresa Lang (Auburn University at Montgomery)

    Nor Aziah Abd. Manaf (Universiti Utara Malaysia)

    Mohd Rizal Palil (Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia)

    Jeff Pope (Curtin University)

    Donna Bobek Schmitt (University of South Carolina)

    Tanya Tang (Brock University)

    Recep Yucedogru (University of Nottingham)

In this volume, there are six papers. In the lead paper, Kimberly Key, Teresa Lightner, and Bing Luo extend literature in the property tax area, especially in helping to define and operationalize Quality of Life measures that explain property values. Using composite rankings to measure the economy, education, health, and public safety, they provide evidence on how property taxes are capitalized into housing prices. Their study will help future researchers to more fully consider public service benefits in their tax capitalization models.

Shifting from the micro-aspect of tax capitalization models, the second paper in this volume provides macro evidence on the domestic effective tax rate (ETR) of US corporations over the time period 2003–2010. Yaron Lahav and Galla Salganik-Shoshan investigate how domestic ETRs are affected by factors representing business and financial structure along with macroeconomic conditions. While they acknowledge some of their findings might be anticipated, other results suggest the need for more research.

Adopting a different methodological approach, but still focused in part on ETRs, Emer Mulligan and Lynne Oats report on the findings of 26 semi-structured interviews conducted with tax executives from 15 Silicon Valley corporations. This study highlights the value of qualitative research as interviewing tax professionals allowed the authors to drill down and understand how performance measures are used in tax departments and how tax as a measure of organizational performance is presented to external stakeholders.

The next three papers in this volume are an integrated forum on tax morale and the measurement of compliance attitudes. In the first paper of this forum, William D. Brink and Thomas M. Porcano use structural equation modeling to develop a comprehensive international tax evasion framework by analyzing direct and indirect paths between country-level cultural and economic structural variables and tax morale and evasion.

In the second paper of the forum, Fadi Alasfour, Martin Samy, and Roberta Bampton review the literature on tax morale and issue a survey instrument to Jordanian tax auditors and financial managers. Apart from the specific empirical results, this Jordanian study is notable as there is little prior research on tax morale in non-Western countries and also for their development of a multi-item index comprising 17 questions to measure participants’ “intrinsic motivations” to pay taxes.

Finally, in a related methodological paper, Diana Onu thoughtfully examines the way that prior literature has researched the link between tax attitude measures and actual compliance behavior. She suggests several avenues to improving the predictive value of attitude measures and offers a number of recommendations that will prove useful to behavioral tax researchers.

In future volumes, I wish to signal that apart from continuing its tradition of publishing original research-based manuscripts, Advances in Taxation will consider publishing papers on methodological issues (as several of the papers in this volume attest) and quality and topics papers on aspects of tax education, the tax profession, and also well-crafted replications co-authored by doctoral students and faculty.

John Hasseldine

Editor