Author
Abstract
Purpose - This study offers a Bourdieu-oriented analysis of the tax compliance practice for indigenous entrepreneurs in New Zealand. It examines the intersection of accounting and tax for Māori entrepreneurs and their relational interactions with the Inland Revenue Department (IRD)/state/Crown and accountants by considering the contextual factors of history, culture and society of Māori. Design/methodology/approach - Qualitative research was adopted using face-to-face in-depth interviews with 34 participants and reviewing government documents. The authors analyse the tax compliance practice by drawing on Bourdieu's concepts of field, capital and habitus to conceptualise the tax field as a site of struggle for power and control by the IRD, accountants and indigenous entrepreneurs. Findings - This study demonstrates how the tax field is structured as a game between tax reporting, taxpaying and monitoring functions. The position within the field is determined by the actor's access to the relevant capitals and habitus. It identifies how accounting, given its centrality to tax compliance, facilitates the power relations between the IRD, accountants and Māori entrepreneurs. The Eurocentric accounting-based tax reporting and the contextual factors illuminate how indigenous entrepreneurs are being dominated in the tax field. They experienced cultural dissonance with conflicting responsibilities when traversing the collectivistic indigenous and tax fields. Their collectivism involves sharing resources as they cherishwhanaungatanga(relationship, kinship) andmanaakitanga(kindness, generosity), which are at odds and are not valued in the tax field. Practical implications - It is an empirical illustration of the connection between accounting, tax and power for indigenous taxpayers and their relationship with the IRD/Crown and accountants. It has practical implications for developing and enhancing tax compliance in jurisdictions with indigenous taxpayers. Such an understanding is helpful for policymakers, government, business agencies and the accounting professions when assisting, empowering and educating indigenous groups regarding tax compliance. Originality/value - This paper responds to the call for accounting research with modern-day indigenous peoples rather than historical ones. The paper fills a gap in the accounting and tax literature by examining the tax compliance practice of indigenous small and medium enterprise (SME) entrepreneurs using Bourdieu's framework. It identifies how the role of accounting creates, maintains and reinforces power structures in the tax field. Tax/accounting reporting based on Eurocentric rules disempowers and alienates indigenous entrepreneurs. They misrecognise their actions in reproducing the existing power structures in the tax field due to deeply held historical and cultural factors about the fear of the Crown/state and their practice ofrangitaratanga(esteeming authorities).
Suggested Citation
Sue Yong & Peni Fukofuka, 2023.
"Accounting, tax compliance and New Zealand indigenous entrepreneurs: a Bourdieusian perspective,"
Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, vol. 36(5), pages 1350-1378, January.
Handle:
RePEc:eme:aaajpp:aaaj-12-2017-3273
DOI: 10.1108/AAAJ-12-2017-3273
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Cited by:
- Anesa, Mattia & Bressan, Alessandro, 2024.
"SMEs tax minimization as shared responsibility,"
CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON ACCOUNTING, Elsevier, vol. 98(C).
- Hunar Mohammed & Anita Tangl, 2023.
"Taxation Perspectives: Analyzing the Factors behind Viewing Taxes as Punishment—A Comprehensive Study of Taxes as Service or Strain,"
JRFM, MDPI, vol. 17(1), pages 1-17, December.
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