Title :
Why People e-File (or Don´t e-File) Their Income Taxes
Author :
Gallant, Linda M. ; Culnan, Mary J. ; McLoughlin, Patrick
Author_Institution :
Bentley Coll., Waltham, MA
Abstract :
In 2005, 52% of taxpayers filed their federal returns electronically. This is far short of the IRS goal of having 80% of returns filed electronically by 2007. Using the e-commerce technology adoption literature, this exploratory study investigates factors that differentiate e-filers from non-e-filers. People who e-file perceived e-filing to be less useful measured as convenience, and less expensive than non-e-filers, with convenience making the greatest contribution. The results for perceived usefulness were unexpected. People who e-file also perceived e-filing to be safer but less easy-to-use than those who do not e-file; however, these variables were not significant discriminators of e-filers from those who did not e-file. As the costs associated with e-filing differentiate it from most other consumer e-commerce applications, this study contributes to the e-commerce technology adoption literature. Further, the findings suggest that the e-commerce adoption literature is an appropriate theoretical basis for studying adoption of e-government applications
Keywords :
electronic commerce; government data processing; taxation; e-commerce technology; e-file; e-government; federal returns; income tax; Application software; Costs; Educational institutions; Electronic commerce; Electronic government; Finance; Home computing; Internet; Monitoring; Urban areas;
Conference_Titel :
System Sciences, 2007. HICSS 2007. 40th Annual Hawaii International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Waikoloa, HI
Electronic_ISBN :
1530-1605
DOI :
10.1109/HICSS.2007.615