@inbook{85b98b26d19e4d4981fa2dc972aa8753,
title = "Prospect Theory and Tax Compliance",
abstract = "This chapter discusses prospect theory as an alternative approach in explaining tax compliance behavior. (Non)Compliance is frequently modeled as the outcome of a decision under risk, that is, the choice between a safe option of being compliant and a risky option of not complying with the law. Noncompliance results in either a better or a worse outcome than compliance, depending on whether the behavior is audited and penalized. The most prominent descriptive model to explain risky decisions is prospect theory. Many of this theory{\textquoteright}s core ideas have been applied in theoretical and empirical studies of compliance. After a brief overview of prospect theory, this chapter summarizes empirical studies as examples for prospect theory inspired compliance research. It closes with a summary and critique of this approach.",
author = "Stephan Muehlbacher",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021 Cambridge University Press.",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1017/9781108759458.037",
language = "Deutsch",
isbn = "9781108477123",
series = "Cambridge Law Handbooks",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
pages = "541--550",
editor = "{van Rooij}, Benjamin and Sokol, {D. Daniel}",
booktitle = "The Cambridge Handbook of Compliance",
address = "Gro{\ss}britannien/Vereinigtes K{\"o}nigreich",
}