The Knowledge Deficit About Taxes: Who It Affects and What to Do About It

20 Pages Posted: 14 Jul 2017

See all articles by Luc Godbout

Luc Godbout

FAC. ADM. Sciences comptables et de fiscalité

Antoine Genest-Grégoire

Université de Sherbrooke; Carleton University - School of Public Policy and Administration

Jean-Herman Guay

Université de Sherbrooke

Date Written: July 5, 2017

Abstract

Tax professionals argue that the tax system is too complex for ordinary taxpayers and that this sometimes makes their work for clients more educational than strategic. Tax complexity is not only a headache for these professionals but also a source of inefficiency and unfairness in our tax system as not every citizen understands it to the same degree. We use the tax system to support our retirement, education and poverty-reduction public programs. Failures of the tax system affect these programs as well. Weak understanding of taxes has also been shown to lower the level of trust of citizens in the tax system. This lower level of trust can translate into higher rates of tax evasion or avoidance, raising the cost of taxation for everyone. Canada has experience assessing the financial literacy of its citizens and is developing policies to raise it. This issue is considered strategic as financial tools and markets become more and more complicated and our population is aging. The tax system is a financial tool that citizens must know how to use as much as mortgages or pension funds are. Drawing from the research on financial literacy, we aim to develop a method to measure “tax literacy.” We evaluate, with the use of a survey administered by the polling firm Crop to Quebec citizens, the knowledge and skills of citizens concerning fiscal matters, understood broadly to include direct and indirect taxation as well as social transfers. Age, education and income are associated with higher knowledge of these matters, but not gender or being self-employed. Higher tax literacy is associated with a higher propensity for taxpayers to produce their tax return themselves rather than with the help of a professional. It also appears that women tend to underestimate their understanding of tax. Tax literacy, and the methods for its measurement, are a new tool to assess the failures of certain policies such as the Children Fitness Tax Credit or the Canada Learning Bond to reach their target audiences. More generally, weak understanding of taxes contributes to lowered trust in our tax system, which underpins our social bonds. Assessing this issue is a first step towards making our tax system fairer and more efficient.

Keywords: Fiscal and Tax Policy

JEL Classification: H2; H3

Suggested Citation

Godbout, Luc and Genest-Grégoire, Antoine and Guay, Jean-Herman, The Knowledge Deficit About Taxes: Who It Affects and What to Do About It (July 5, 2017). C.D. Howe Institute Commentary 484, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2998056 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2998056

Luc Godbout

FAC. ADM. Sciences comptables et de fiscalité ( email )

2500 bd de l'Universite
Sherbrooke, Québec J1K 2R1
Canada

Antoine Genest-Grégoire (Contact Author)

Université de Sherbrooke ( email )

2500 bd de l'Universite
Sherbrooke, Québec J1K 2R1
Canada

Carleton University - School of Public Policy and Administration ( email )

Ottawa, Ontario
Canada

Jean-Herman Guay

Université de Sherbrooke ( email )

2500 bd de l'Universite
Sherbrooke, Québec J1K 2R1
Canada

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