Sample size determination for risk-based tax auditing
Dellaportas, P; Ioannidis, E; Kotsogiannis, C
Date: 5 January 2021
Journal
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series A
Publisher
Royal Statistical Society / Wiley
Publisher DOI
Abstract
A modern system of Revenue Administration requires an effective and efficient
management of compliance which in turn requires a well designed taxpayers audit strategy.
The selection of taxpayers to be audited by Revenue Authorities is a non-standard sample size
determination problem, involving an initial random sample from the ...
A modern system of Revenue Administration requires an effective and efficient
management of compliance which in turn requires a well designed taxpayers audit strategy.
The selection of taxpayers to be audited by Revenue Authorities is a non-standard sample size
determination problem, involving an initial random sample from the population and, based on
the statistical information derived from it, a risk-based auditing scheme whose sole objective
is to select for auditing the taxpayers with the highest estimated risk in the population. This
paper provides a methodological approach that estimates the initial optimal random sample
size such that the Revenue Administration Authority maximises their expected tax revenues.
The methodology is illustrated using administrative data from the UK’s Revenue Authority, Her
Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC).
Economics
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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