
Caught cheating: When sin taxes forge unforeseen fallout
From sugar to cigarettes, raising taxes on certain products is intended to discourage unhealthy or undesirable behaviors. These taxes — called sin taxes — may be effective in reducing the use of those products, but is that the only consequence?
From sugar to cigarettes, raising taxes on certain products is intended to discourage unhealthy or undesirable behaviors. These taxes — called sin taxes — may be effective in reducing the use of those products, but is that the only consequence?
In this story published Dec. 14, 2021, on Bloomberg Tax:
We then examine how their likelihood of committing fraud changes around a large increase in federal sales taxes on cigarettes. We find that in the month immediately after the tax hike, smokers ramp up their cheating by about half — this represents an increase of about 1.1 fraudulent trips per month.
– David Kenchington, assistant professor of accountancy
– Roger White, associate professor of accountancy
Latest news
- Full-time MBA program helps Gina Larson transition from Peace Corps to running cross-cultural venture
Returning from serving in the Peace Corps in Kosovo, Gina Larson (Full-time MBA '26) has found a…
- The subscription trap and how it impacts students' budgets
Monthly subscriptions can reinforce behaviors like the sunk-cost fallacy and loss aversion,…
- Digital therapeutic approach to health literacy can enhance patients' engagement with educational materials
An ASU information systems expert discusses the limitations of digital technology related to…