Abstract

Tax compliance is a major contemporary debate surrounding corporate taxation in the business world. The tax avoidance issue, which remains an ethical problem for companies, has been a general concern in developed and developing countries alike. The main problem of this study is a non-tax compliance behavior of the corporate organization taxpayers in Nigeria. This study examined the influence of tax fairness on the tax compliance behavior of listed manufacturing companies in Nigeria. The paper adopted a survey research method, and four hundred (400) copies of the questionnaire were administered to the selected manufacturing companies of both consumer and industrial goods sectors. The Laffer Curve Theory underpinned this study and Correlation Analysis, Analysis of Variance (ANOVA), and Multiple Regression Analysis were also employed. The study found that there is a significant level of tax compliance among the listed manufacturing companies in Nigeria. The study also shows that the corporate taxpayer’s perception of fairness of –2.765 (0.006) has a significant impact on corporate taxpayers’ willingness to pay taxes and tax knowledge of 4.601 (0.000) significantly influenced tax compliance. Based on tax knowledge, the study recommends that tax authorities must improve the knowledge of taxpayers and tax collection agents through programs, initiatives, and training on tax awareness.

Highlights

  • The Nigerian economy is the largest in Africa with a Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of 375.8 billion US dollars in the year 2017, while South Africa’s GDP of 349.4 billion US dollars trails behind Nigeria

  • The findings revealed that justice and Gberegbe et al (2015) studied the perception trust have a significant effect in determining tax of tax fairness on personal income tax compliance compliance behavior in Malaysia

  • This study examined the influence of tax fairness and tax knowledge on tax compliance behavior of listed manufacturing companies in both consumer goods and industrial goods sectors of the Nigerian economy

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Summary

Introduction

The Nigerian economy is the largest in Africa with a Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of 375.8 billion US dollars in the year 2017, while South Africa’s GDP of 349.4 billion US dollars trails behind Nigeria. The Nigerian economy is made up of many sectors with a total market capitalization of N22.35 trillion ($61.44 billion) as at September 2018, of which the manufacturing sector is one of them (Nigerian Stock Exchange, 2018). The manufacturing industry applies to those sectors and operations that are active in the transformation, production, and processing of items that create value addition to the commodity (Falade & Olagbaju, 2015). The activities in the manufacturing sector cover a wide range of products, and it contains manufacturing, metal/ plastic, ICT/electrical, garment and clothes, accessories, concrete, and infrastructure. Other manufacturing activities have been divided into eleven different activities, where food, beverages, and tobacco are the dominant activities of the sector.

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