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An Evolutionary Game Model for Understanding Fraud in Consumption Taxes

[PDF] chica21_CIM.pdf (2.042Mo)
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/104819
DOI: 10.1109/MCI.2021.3061878
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Statistiques d'usage de visualisation
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Auteur
Chica Serrano, Manuel; Hernández Guerra, Juan; Manrique de Lara, Casiano; Chiong, Raymond
Editorial
IEEE
Date
2021-04-12
Referencia bibliográfica
Chica Serrano, Manuel et al. IEEE Computational Intelligence Magazine 16 (2) 62-76. DOI: 10.1109/MCI.2021.3061878
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Science; Andalusian Government; ERDF PGC2018-101216-B-I00, P18-TP-4475, RYC-2016-19800; Regional Government of the Canary Islands FULP, CN45/08 240/57/100
Résumé
This paper presents a computational evolutionary game model to study and understand fraud dynamics in the consumption tax system. Players are cooperators if they correctly declare their value added tax (VAT), and are defectors otherwise. Each player's payoff is influenced by the amount evaded and the subjective probability of being inspected by tax authorities. Since transactions between companies must be declared by both the buyer and seller, a strategy adopted by one influences the other?s payoff. We study the model with a wellmixed population and different scalefree networks. Model parameters were calibrated using real-world data of VAT declarations by businesses registered in the Canary Islands region of Spain. We analyzed several scenarios of audit probabilities for high and low transactions and their prevalence in the population, as well as social rewards and penalties to find the most efficient policy to increase the proportion of cooperators. Two major insights were found. First, increasing the subjective audit probability for low transactions is more efficient than increasing this probability for high transactions. Second, favoring social rewards for cooperators or alternative penalties for defectors can be effective policies, but their success depends on the distribution of the audit probability for low and high transactions.
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