Book-tax gap as a tool for the detection of anomalous corporate tax-sheltering behavior: The case of firms in the Philippine Stock Exchange

Corporate tax-sheltering behavior has become increasingly important in the realm of auditing and financial reporting because of the possible financial and even legal ramifications of undisclosed tax sheltering behavior. Tax sheltering is normally viewed as value enhancing for corporations because of...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Castillo, John David C., Cheng, Renz Kristofer M., Palanca, Troy James R., Zamudio, Ira Gayll C.
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 2013
Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_honors/363
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: De La Salle University
Language: English
id oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_honors-1362
record_format eprints
spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_honors-13622022-02-23T04:36:38Z Book-tax gap as a tool for the detection of anomalous corporate tax-sheltering behavior: The case of firms in the Philippine Stock Exchange Castillo, John David C. Cheng, Renz Kristofer M. Palanca, Troy James R. Zamudio, Ira Gayll C. Corporate tax-sheltering behavior has become increasingly important in the realm of auditing and financial reporting because of the possible financial and even legal ramifications of undisclosed tax sheltering behavior. Tax sheltering is normally viewed as value enhancing for corporations because of reduced tax liabilities but this is not always the case if done under questionable where managerial opportunism may be bred. With this in mind, this paper is two-fold. Firstly, this paper develops a tool detecting anomalous levels of tax sheltering that may be utilized by an average auditor as an impetus for further investigation. This is done by empirically establishing acceptable levels of book-tax gap – a measure of tax sheltering and computed from companies reported financial information, through a non-parametric approach that uses the Wald's test. This is done per industry to account for the varying structures and natures of these industries that may result to inherently different book tax gaps. After detecting anomalous levels of book tax gaps, it is important to be able to advise the client accordingly to prevent future incidents. Therefore, the second part of this paper focuses on identifying explanatory variables for the book-tax gap, specifically those relating to corporate governance structure that can be readily adjusted by the management. A panel data approach using panel OLS with panel-corrected standard errors is used for this purpose. We establish the aggregate standard threshold of book-tax gap and the different thresholds in each of the eight industries, and that the Financial, Mining and Oil, and Services industries consistently show higher levels of book-tax gap thresholds. As for the second part of the paper, the results of the economic analysis show that (1) independence of board of directors, (2) auditor identity, (3) group-affiliation, (4) family-affiliation, and (5) transparency are the corporate governance structures that affect corporate tax sheltering. These findings are recommended to be used in audit procedures to increase the probability of detecting anomalous tax-sheltering behavior and preventing it in the future. 2013-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_honors/363 Honors Theses English Animo Repository
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
language English
description Corporate tax-sheltering behavior has become increasingly important in the realm of auditing and financial reporting because of the possible financial and even legal ramifications of undisclosed tax sheltering behavior. Tax sheltering is normally viewed as value enhancing for corporations because of reduced tax liabilities but this is not always the case if done under questionable where managerial opportunism may be bred. With this in mind, this paper is two-fold. Firstly, this paper develops a tool detecting anomalous levels of tax sheltering that may be utilized by an average auditor as an impetus for further investigation. This is done by empirically establishing acceptable levels of book-tax gap – a measure of tax sheltering and computed from companies reported financial information, through a non-parametric approach that uses the Wald's test. This is done per industry to account for the varying structures and natures of these industries that may result to inherently different book tax gaps. After detecting anomalous levels of book tax gaps, it is important to be able to advise the client accordingly to prevent future incidents. Therefore, the second part of this paper focuses on identifying explanatory variables for the book-tax gap, specifically those relating to corporate governance structure that can be readily adjusted by the management. A panel data approach using panel OLS with panel-corrected standard errors is used for this purpose. We establish the aggregate standard threshold of book-tax gap and the different thresholds in each of the eight industries, and that the Financial, Mining and Oil, and Services industries consistently show higher levels of book-tax gap thresholds. As for the second part of the paper, the results of the economic analysis show that (1) independence of board of directors, (2) auditor identity, (3) group-affiliation, (4) family-affiliation, and (5) transparency are the corporate governance structures that affect corporate tax sheltering. These findings are recommended to be used in audit procedures to increase the probability of detecting anomalous tax-sheltering behavior and preventing it in the future.
format text
author Castillo, John David C.
Cheng, Renz Kristofer M.
Palanca, Troy James R.
Zamudio, Ira Gayll C.
spellingShingle Castillo, John David C.
Cheng, Renz Kristofer M.
Palanca, Troy James R.
Zamudio, Ira Gayll C.
Book-tax gap as a tool for the detection of anomalous corporate tax-sheltering behavior: The case of firms in the Philippine Stock Exchange
author_facet Castillo, John David C.
Cheng, Renz Kristofer M.
Palanca, Troy James R.
Zamudio, Ira Gayll C.
author_sort Castillo, John David C.
title Book-tax gap as a tool for the detection of anomalous corporate tax-sheltering behavior: The case of firms in the Philippine Stock Exchange
title_short Book-tax gap as a tool for the detection of anomalous corporate tax-sheltering behavior: The case of firms in the Philippine Stock Exchange
title_full Book-tax gap as a tool for the detection of anomalous corporate tax-sheltering behavior: The case of firms in the Philippine Stock Exchange
title_fullStr Book-tax gap as a tool for the detection of anomalous corporate tax-sheltering behavior: The case of firms in the Philippine Stock Exchange
title_full_unstemmed Book-tax gap as a tool for the detection of anomalous corporate tax-sheltering behavior: The case of firms in the Philippine Stock Exchange
title_sort book-tax gap as a tool for the detection of anomalous corporate tax-sheltering behavior: the case of firms in the philippine stock exchange
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2013
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_honors/363
_version_ 1726158551951343616