Abstract

The South African government has benefited to date from information technology in many ways. The importance of understanding and influencing South African citizens’ acceptance of E-Government services is critical, given the substantial investment in government communication, information system technology and the potential for cost saving. One of the most successful E-Government initiatives, the electronic filing system (eFiling), allows tax returns to be filed electronically. Despite many taxpayers adopting this method, a large number are still using the traditional manual method of filing tax returns. This study utilised the decomposed theory of planned behaviour with factors adjusted specifically for South Africa as a developing country to identify the possible determinants of user acceptance of the eFiling system among taxpayers. This exploratory study was conducted by means of a questionnaire survey. For taxpayers using the manual method, lack of facilitating conditions such as access to computer and internet resources was the most significant barrier to eFiling usage, while taxpayers using the electronic method reported perceived usefulness as the primary determinant in their decision to use eFiling. Understanding these acceptance factors can extend our knowledge of taxpayers’ decision-making and lead to better planning and implementation of future E-Government initiatives in South Africa and other developing countries.

Highlights

  • User acceptance of electronic transactions has improved significantly over the past decade, with more individuals using the internet as a medium of transaction

  • The objective of this study is to identify the determinants of user acceptance of the electronic filing (eFiling) system among taxpayers in South Africa

  • This reveals that there was no bias toward a specific gender and, it can be concluded that the decision to use eFiling or not is not dependent on a specific gender, as there was no significant difference in gender distribution between the two groups

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

User acceptance of electronic transactions has improved significantly over the past decade, with more individuals using the internet as a medium of transaction. One of the most successful E-Government initiatives has been electronic filing (eFiling), which was introduced by the South African Revenue Services (SARS) in 2001. The research problem that this study aims to address is the identification of the determinants of user acceptance of eFiling in South Africa. The objective of this study is to identify the determinants of user acceptance of the eFiling system among taxpayers in South Africa. This was done through the development of a theoretical framework by reviewing literature on the determinants of user acceptance of the efiling system from other countries. The views of the greater taxpayer population may well differ when measured over a longer time period (Leedy & Ormrod, 2010:187)

THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
Technology acceptance
DEVELOPMENT OF THE HYPOTHESES
RESEARCH DESIGN
Sampling
RESEARCH FINDINGS AND INTERPRETATION
Analysis of constructs and hypotheses
Manual tax filers
Electronic tax filers
Full Text
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