Keywords

tax boycotts, corporate tax activities, consumer survey, scanner data, foot traffic

Abstract

To what extent do consumers boycott in response to corporate tax activities? Anecdotes suggest potential consumer backlash is a meaningful deterrent to corporate tax planning, and the tax literature has developed expectations that these boycotts happen. But empirical evidence on their existence and impact is limited. We undertake a comprehensive study to examine how consumers’ purchase behavior relates to corporate tax activities, triangulating across several designs, samples, and measures. First, we survey a representative sample of U.S. consumers to examine the reported relationship between corporate tax planning and consumer behavior; we find that consumers report that precisely zero have ever boycotted a firm because of tax planning. Next, we use a granular dataset of retail scanner data to directly observe consumer purchase activity and find no consumer purchase response to negative tax news. Next, we use GPS location data to examine individual foot traffic activity at retail establishments and find little evidence that consumers change their shopping activities in response to tax news. Finally, we conduct several supplementary analyses investigating the potential consumer responses related to other corporate events. The combined evidence does not support tax boycotts as a meaningful consumer response to corporate tax activities, despite managers’ expressed concerns of tarnished consumer reputations related to firms’ tax decisions.

Original Publication Citation

“Tax Boycotts” (with Scott Asay, Jeff Hoopes and Jaron Wilde). The Accounting Review (2024) 99 (1):1-29.

Document Type

Peer-Reviewed Article

Publication Date

2022

Publisher

The Accounting Review

Language

English

College

Marriott School of Business

Department

Ancient Scripture

University Standing at Time of Publication

Full Professor

Included in

Accounting Commons

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