There is a large literature showing that the self-employed underreport their income to tax authorities. In this paper, we quantify the extent to which the self-employed also systematically underreport their income in U.S. household surveys. To do so, we use the Engel curve describing the relationship between income and expenditures of wage and salary workers to infer the actual income, and thus the reporting gap, of the self-employed based on their reported expenditures. We find that the self-employed underreport their income by about 30 percent. This result is remarkably robust across data sources and alternative model specifications. Failing to account for such income underreporting leads to biased conclusions. We document this bias in ex...
This document serves as the online robustness appendix to our paper “Are Household Survey
This paper estimates income tax underreporting for the case of Germany, by income category and alon...
We apply a direct method to estimate tax evasion in Italy assuming that tax evaders might consider d...
There is a large literature showing that the self-employed underreport their income to tax authoriti...
This meta-analysis has investigated the relative income underreporting (k) in a sample of 30 intern...
The income of the self-employed is often assumed to be understated in economic statistics. Debate ex...
This paper provides estimates of the income-gap of the self-employed – defined as the proportion of ...
Self-employed individuals have arguably greater opportunities than wage earners to underreport their...
The income of the self-employed is often assumed to be understated in economic statistics. Debate ex...
There is considerable interest in measuring the underground economy using microeconomic data. One s...
There is considerable interest in measuring the underground economy using microeconomic data. One su...
This paper studies tax evasion and misreporting by comparing data from income tax files and a survey...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press ...
The paper uses the flexibility of household survey data to align their income categories and recipie...
The paper estimates the distributional implications of income tax evasion in Hungary based on a rand...
This document serves as the online robustness appendix to our paper “Are Household Survey
This paper estimates income tax underreporting for the case of Germany, by income category and alon...
We apply a direct method to estimate tax evasion in Italy assuming that tax evaders might consider d...
There is a large literature showing that the self-employed underreport their income to tax authoriti...
This meta-analysis has investigated the relative income underreporting (k) in a sample of 30 intern...
The income of the self-employed is often assumed to be understated in economic statistics. Debate ex...
This paper provides estimates of the income-gap of the self-employed – defined as the proportion of ...
Self-employed individuals have arguably greater opportunities than wage earners to underreport their...
The income of the self-employed is often assumed to be understated in economic statistics. Debate ex...
There is considerable interest in measuring the underground economy using microeconomic data. One s...
There is considerable interest in measuring the underground economy using microeconomic data. One su...
This paper studies tax evasion and misreporting by comparing data from income tax files and a survey...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press ...
The paper uses the flexibility of household survey data to align their income categories and recipie...
The paper estimates the distributional implications of income tax evasion in Hungary based on a rand...
This document serves as the online robustness appendix to our paper “Are Household Survey
This paper estimates income tax underreporting for the case of Germany, by income category and alon...
We apply a direct method to estimate tax evasion in Italy assuming that tax evaders might consider d...