Listing 1 - 10 of 1032 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Choose an application
This policy note takes as its starting point the common view that there are benefits and costs to formal status and that formalization will occur only if entrepreneurs perceive it to be in their self-interest. No doubt part of the answer lies in reducing the costs and time required for compliance -- as the World Bank's Doing Business project has documented. But lowering barriers to entry is unlikely to be sufficient. Encouraging formalization requires us to understand the relationship between state and private business as a bargain. And it also challenges policy-makers and development practitioners to think not only about technical solutions but also about institutional mechanisms for improving relations between entrepreneurs and the state.
Choose an application
Choose an application
Taxpayer compliance --- Tax compliance --- Compliance --- Tax collection
Choose an application
Virtually all medical and behavioral health treatments require at least some degree of patient adherence to succeed. Despite the relationship between health behaviors and outcomes, little attention is paid to developing proven methods for identifying and addressing patient non-adherence. Improving Patient Treatment Adherence: A Clinician's Guide offers new and updated information on the subject by focusing on practical tactics for clinicians that can improve patient adherence to a wide variety of treatments. This book is organized by behaviors looking at topics that range from dietary adherence and smoking cessation to chronic pain, HIV and substance abuse and examines the impact of patient non-adherence, including costs, clinical outcomes, and health-related quality of life. Helpful tables, questions, and scoring algorithms make this book a useful guide for any practicing physician.
Patient compliance --- Patient Compliance --- Patient Compliance. --- Patient compliance. --- Patients --- Coopération.
Choose an application
The issue of trust between Multinational Enterprises (MNEs) and tax administrations is a vital part of the tax system, but relatively little studied. Building on previous OECD research on tax morale, which measures taxpayer perceptions and attitudes towards paying and evading taxes, this report presents new data on how tax administrations perceive MNE behaviour towards tax compliance.
Choose an application
Choose an application
This book provides the historical background, legal implications and ethical concerns when individuals or families either limit, refuse or delay traditional Western medical care based on their religious, cultural or philosophical beliefs. Findings from recent ethnographic research, clinical guidelines and latest technology are shared to provide examples of current refusal scenarios and to demonstrate the impact on those involved.
Choose an application
In this paper, we analyze the tax compliance behavior of US taxpayers by using a 1979 data set that combines information from a random sample of individual tax returns each of which has been thoroughly audited, IRS administrative records, and sociodemographic data from the Census. We find evidence that both audits and tax code provisions affect compliance. However, the effects are significant for only the low and high income groups. Interestingly, previous research has shown that these groups also participate most actively in underground economic activities, the income from which is not reported on any tax returns. Our results for audits suggest that the "ripple" or general deterrent effect of audits may be many times larger than the direct revenue yield of audits for high income taxpayers. Our results for allowable subtractions from income imply that the 1986 Tax Reform Act changes to lower allowable subtractions may have procompliance effects.
Choose an application
Listing 1 - 10 of 1032 | << page >> |
Sort by
|