Does the Bomb-crater Effect Really Exist? Evidence from the Laboratory

Author(s)
Matthias Kasper, James Alm
Abstract

Laboratory experiments have often found that taxpayers who are audited reduce their compliance immediately after the audit, a response termed the bomb-crater effect. This study uses a laboratory experiment to investigate the bomb-crater effect, including tests of three main behavioral explanations for its existence: making up for losses incurred in the past (loss repair), assuming incorrectly that experiencing an audit decreases the risk of a future audit (misperception of risk), and assessing the probability of a future audit according to the ease of recalling a previous audit (availability heuristic). We find no evidence of a bomb-crater effect. Specifically, when comparing the changes in reporting behavior of audited taxpayers with changes of unaudited taxpayers, we find that audits do not induce a significant behavioral response in general, and they do not induce a bomb-crater effect in particular. Rather, our findings suggest that taxpayer compliance in the laboratory is quite volatile, even absent any audits, and that there is little difference in behavior between audited and unaudited taxpayers. These results have an important methodological implication for laboratory experiments: experimental studies should use control groups of unaudited taxpayers to identify the true causal effect of audits on-audit tax

Organisation(s)
Department of Occupational, Economic and Social Psychology
External organisation(s)
Tulane University
Journal
Finanzarchiv
Volume
78
Pages
87-111
No. of pages
25
ISSN
0015-2218
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1628/fa-2021-0014
Publication date
03-2022
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
501029 Economic psychology
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Finance
Portal url
https://ucris.univie.ac.at/portal/en/publications/does-the-bombcrater-effect-really-exist-evidence-from-the-laboratory(5fe86c6f-8aa0-4160-a4f9-429af41f3da6).html