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Cover of: Mental Accounting of Self-Employed Taxpayers: On the Mental Segregation of the Net Income and the Tax Due
Erich Kirchler, Stephan Muehlbacher

Mental Accounting of Self-Employed Taxpayers: On the Mental Segregation of the Net Income and the Tax Due

Section: Articles
Volume 69 (2013) / Issue 4, pp. 412-438 (27)
Published 09.07.2018
DOI 10.1628/001522113X675656
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  • 10.1628/001522113X675656
Summary
Mental accounting practices of self-employed taxpayers are investigated in two studies. Interviews (N = 30) revealed that perceptions of the tax due differ widely. While a majority mentally segregate the tax component from their net income, others claim ownership of the gross income as a whole and consequently experience a loss when paying taxes. A survey (N = 172) shows that mental segregation is associated with age, income, and number of employees, and is further related to attitudes towards taxes and to self-reported compliance. It is concluded that especially inexperienced self-employed should be trained in favorable mental tax accounting practices to foster voluntary compliance.