Effects of Economic Deterrence Theory and Environmental Regulation on Tax Evasion: Evidence from Energy Sector

Ya'u, Abba and Hasan Miraz, Mahadi and Saad, Natrah and Bala, Hussaini and Rangasamy, Dhanuskodi and Nafi’u Olaniyi, Oladokun and Aliyu Mustapha, Umar (2023) Effects of Economic Deterrence Theory and Environmental Regulation on Tax Evasion: Evidence from Energy Sector. International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy, 13 (5). pp. 289-302. ISSN 2146-4553

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Abstract

Environmental regulation is the responsibility of individuals, corporations, and other entities to prevent environmental damage or improve the tarnished environment. The Environmental law of every country works to protect the natural resources of land, water, air, and soil. There are research evidence that environmental regulation influences Corporate taxes. Economic deterrence theory acted as deterrent to threats of punishment for unwanted or illegal behavior. The fundamental concept of the theory is deterring the taxpayers into compliance by the risk of audit, penalty, etc. The objective of the study is to analyze the impact of economic deterrence theory and environmental regulation on corporate tax evasion, particularly petroleum profit taxes in Nigeria. The components of Economic deterrence theory (tax agents, tax complexity, tax knowledge) and environmental regulations are the independent variables and corporate tax evasion particularly PPT is the dependent variable of the study. It is quantitative research based on primary data which was collected from the oil and gas companies’ representatives. Structural Equation Modelling techniques were applied, and the outcome of the research is a positive and significant relationship between tax agents, tax complexity, tax knowledge, and environmental regulations on corporate tax evasion. The result further shows a positive but non-significant relationship between tax audits and perceived petroleum profit tax evasion. The study draws the attention of policymakers to formulate environmental regulations that are more robust, simple, and flexible, to reduce adverse effects of environmental damage on the economic growth and development of oil and gas-producing countries.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: energy sector, Environmental regulation, tax evasion, economics deterrence theory
Subjects: Social Science > Banking
Social Science > H Social Sciences (General)
Social Science > HB Economic Theory
Social Science > HC Economic History and Conditions
Social Science > HD Industries. Land use. Labor > HD28 Management. Industrial Management
Social Science > HF Commerce > HF5601 Accounting
Depositing User: ePrints deposit
Date Deposited: 24 Sep 2024 13:51
Last Modified: 24 Sep 2024 13:51
URI: http://eprints.tiu.edu.iq/id/eprint/1689

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