A broad array of law enforcement strategies, from income tax to bank regulation, involve self-reporting by regulated agents and auditing of some fraction of the reports by the regulating bureau. Standard models of self-reporting strategies assume that although bureaus only have estimates of the of an agent’s type, agents know the ability of bureaus to detect their misreports. We relax this assumption, and posit that agents only have an estimate of the auditing capabilities of bureaus. Enriching the model to allow two-sided private information changes the behavior of bureaus. A bureau that is weak at auditing, may wish to mimic a bureau that is strong. Strong bureaus may be able to signal their capabilities, but at a cost. We explore the poo...
Access to third-party information trails is widely believed to be critical to the development of mod...
The role of audit thresholds in the misreporting of private information The accounting profession ha...
To investigate the enforcement value of third-party information on potentially collusive taxpayers, ...
A broad array of law enforcement strategies, from income tax to bank regulation, involve self-report...
Administrative agencies are increasingly establishing voluntary self-reporting programs both as an i...
This Article examines the evolution of EPA\u27s audit policy, explores the reasons for states\u27 di...
The question for the tax authority is how individuals become aware of enforcement effort. To be an e...
We consider a model of law enforcement where homogenous, risk neutral, and corruptible inspectors ar...
Tax authorities around the world often are reluctant to disclose audit policy details. In particular...
This article models the imperfect detection of tax evasion motivated by the existence of a corrupt t...
Classical agency theory argues that economic incentives can have a strong impact on opportunistic re...
Although corporate fraud is not held in check by our current audit process, in which auditors lack i...
A regulator hires an auditor to inspect a firm. Audits serve two purposes: to detectviolations and t...
Within the framework of classical auditing theory (Simunic, 1980), an auditor is motivated to exert ...
With over 18,000 state and local law enforcement agencies in the United States, opportunities exist ...
Access to third-party information trails is widely believed to be critical to the development of mod...
The role of audit thresholds in the misreporting of private information The accounting profession ha...
To investigate the enforcement value of third-party information on potentially collusive taxpayers, ...
A broad array of law enforcement strategies, from income tax to bank regulation, involve self-report...
Administrative agencies are increasingly establishing voluntary self-reporting programs both as an i...
This Article examines the evolution of EPA\u27s audit policy, explores the reasons for states\u27 di...
The question for the tax authority is how individuals become aware of enforcement effort. To be an e...
We consider a model of law enforcement where homogenous, risk neutral, and corruptible inspectors ar...
Tax authorities around the world often are reluctant to disclose audit policy details. In particular...
This article models the imperfect detection of tax evasion motivated by the existence of a corrupt t...
Classical agency theory argues that economic incentives can have a strong impact on opportunistic re...
Although corporate fraud is not held in check by our current audit process, in which auditors lack i...
A regulator hires an auditor to inspect a firm. Audits serve two purposes: to detectviolations and t...
Within the framework of classical auditing theory (Simunic, 1980), an auditor is motivated to exert ...
With over 18,000 state and local law enforcement agencies in the United States, opportunities exist ...
Access to third-party information trails is widely believed to be critical to the development of mod...
The role of audit thresholds in the misreporting of private information The accounting profession ha...
To investigate the enforcement value of third-party information on potentially collusive taxpayers, ...