Abstract:
Purpose- The research project aims to investigate the behavioral intention to adopt the
information technology introduced by federal revenue board for facilitation in submitting
tax return. More specifically, this study intended to classify and test the elements
manipulating the acceptance behavioral intention.
revenue
Methodology/sample- The research was a single case study and has been designed to test the
theory of framework for adopting the technology, and was declared as deductive research
approach. Five hypotheses have been proposed based on the determinants i.e. perceived ease
of use, perceived usefulness, perceived risk, accounting and tax knowledge, and computer
self-efficacy, and primary data has been collected by conducting personal survey. A
questionnaire has been adopted from multiple existing research studies for data collection,
and data from 350 respondents have been collected through convenient sampling technique.
Linear regression has been integrated to test the proposed hypotheses.
Findings- Observed ease of use, accounting as well as tax knowledge, and PC self-efficacy
have been found significantly associated with behavioral intention to adopt the technology
with positive variance. Perceived usefulness was also found significantly associated with
behavioral intention of taxpayers but it showed negative variance. While, observed fear has
been found having insignificant impact on the intent of human behavioral.
Practical Implications- In the light of empirical evidences, it has been suggested that FBR
need to take perceived ease of use, perceived usefulness, accounting and tax knowledge, and
computer self-efficacy into consideration and need to pay attention on these factors in order
to improve the perception plus behavioral intention of the taxpayers.