Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
Effective tax policy requires understanding behavioral decision-making. We investigate reciprocity and whether misperceptions about how the government allocates funds impacts taxpaying behaviors. In an artefactual survey experiment supplemented with administrative tax payment data from 2,000 self-employed workers, preferences and beliefs on government spending are elicited. In the case when revealing the actual distribution improves beliefs relative to preferences, government support increases (0.30 s.d.), views on taxes improve (0.24 s.d.), and affective polarization decreases (0.40 s.d.). However, there is no effect on reported income tax. When beliefs are worsened relative to preferences, there is no significant response on stated outcomes, but we find an increase in reported income tax.