The market for corporate tax knowledge
The market for corporate tax knowledge
A growing international literature advocates the importance of trust and co-operation in tax administration compared to the more traditional ‘adversarial’ approach. Yet, the global financial crisis has led to renewed interest in corporate tax planning and ‘unacceptable’ tax avoidance with a focus on the role of intermediaries such as accounting firms.
This article explores how developments in tax legislation are captured by companies and incorporated into their tax knowledge. We draw on prior literature in knowledge management, the role of accounting firms and tax administration and use a qualitative approach to investigate and describe the relationships between accounting firms, corporate taxpayers and revenue authorities, specifically the UK HM Revenue and Customs HMRC).
Our results show that these relationships can be described in the context of a tax knowledge market comprised of a knowledge seller, knowledge brokers, and knowledge buyers. Our findings have relevance not only for all three parties, in particular for the challenges facing knowledge brokers – but also to tax agencies and international organisations, who must strike the optimal balance between co-operative tax administration and traditional approaches buttressed by tax audit enforcement
accounting firms, knowledge markets, knowledge sharing, tax avoidance, tax legislation, tax planning
39-52
Hasseldine, John
f9d7e911-eecc-4b9a-a502-3f14d5bf4af6
Holland, Kevin
91511fcc-a84b-44b6-98ee-13b6ebde71da
van der Rijt, Pernill
40bbd934-4759-47dd-9687-cf7756e4b68b
January 2011
Hasseldine, John
f9d7e911-eecc-4b9a-a502-3f14d5bf4af6
Holland, Kevin
91511fcc-a84b-44b6-98ee-13b6ebde71da
van der Rijt, Pernill
40bbd934-4759-47dd-9687-cf7756e4b68b
Hasseldine, John, Holland, Kevin and van der Rijt, Pernill
(2011)
The market for corporate tax knowledge.
Critical Perspectives on Accounting, 22 (1), .
(doi:10.1016/j.cpa.2010.06.019).
Abstract
A growing international literature advocates the importance of trust and co-operation in tax administration compared to the more traditional ‘adversarial’ approach. Yet, the global financial crisis has led to renewed interest in corporate tax planning and ‘unacceptable’ tax avoidance with a focus on the role of intermediaries such as accounting firms.
This article explores how developments in tax legislation are captured by companies and incorporated into their tax knowledge. We draw on prior literature in knowledge management, the role of accounting firms and tax administration and use a qualitative approach to investigate and describe the relationships between accounting firms, corporate taxpayers and revenue authorities, specifically the UK HM Revenue and Customs HMRC).
Our results show that these relationships can be described in the context of a tax knowledge market comprised of a knowledge seller, knowledge brokers, and knowledge buyers. Our findings have relevance not only for all three parties, in particular for the challenges facing knowledge brokers – but also to tax agencies and international organisations, who must strike the optimal balance between co-operative tax administration and traditional approaches buttressed by tax audit enforcement
Text
CPA_TMK_e-prints.pdf
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Published date: January 2011
Keywords:
accounting firms, knowledge markets, knowledge sharing, tax avoidance, tax legislation, tax planning
Organisations:
Centre of Excellence in Decision, Analytics & Risk Research
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 149625
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/149625
ISSN: 1045-2354
PURE UUID: 7981a683-4c12-44ff-a94c-90b3897fe784
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Date deposited: 06 May 2010 08:57
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 01:10
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Contributors
Author:
John Hasseldine
Author:
Kevin Holland
Author:
Pernill van der Rijt
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