Abstract:
The current research is based on the assumption that the result of tax inspections is not only collection of taxes and fines. The information about audited taxpayers is also collected and helps to renew a priori knowledge of each agent's evasion propensity and obtain new a posteriori estimate of this propensity. In the beginning of the following tax period the fiscal authority can correct auditing strategy using updated information on every taxpayer. Each inspection is considered as a repeated game, in which the choice of agents to audit is associated with their revealed tendency to evade. Taxpayers also renew the information on the number of inspected neighbors using their social connections, represented by networks of various configurations, and estimate the probability of auditing before the next tax period. Thus, the application of the Bayesian approach to the process of collecting and disseminating information in the network of taxpayers allows to optimize the audit scheme, reducing unnecessary expenses of tax authority and eventually increasing net tax revenue. To illustrate the application of the approach described above to the indicated problem, numerical simulation and scenario analysis were carried out.
Citation:
Suriya Sh. Kumacheva, Galina A. Tomilina, “Information collecting and dissemination in the network of taxpayers: Bayesian approach”, Contributions to Game Theory and Management, 14 (2021), 236–256
\Bibitem{KumTom21}
\by Suriya~Sh.~Kumacheva, Galina~A.~Tomilina
\paper Information collecting and dissemination in the network of taxpayers: Bayesian approach
\jour Contributions to Game Theory and Management
\yr 2021
\vol 14
\pages 236--256
\mathnet{http://mi.mathnet.ru/cgtm400}
\crossref{https://doi.org/10.21638/11701/spbu31.2021.18}
Linking options:
https://www.mathnet.ru/eng/cgtm400
https://www.mathnet.ru/eng/cgtm/v14/p236
This publication is cited in the following 1 articles:
Suriya Sh. Kumacheva, Galina A. Tomilina, “Tax authority and taxpayers: how does mutual collecting of information affect the effectiveness of tax control”, Contributions to Game Theory and Management, 15 (2022), 155–177