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LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS
Kenneth E. Anderson Department of Accounting and
Information Management, University
of Tennessee, TN, USA
Anne L. Christensen College of Business, Montana State
University, MT, USA
Mary Ann Hofmann Walker College of Business, Appalachian
State University, NC, USA
Ira Horowitz University of Florida, FL, USA
Cynthia M. Jackson Accounting Group, College of Business
Administration, Northeastern University,
MA, USA
Rex Karsten Department of Management, University
of Northern Iowa, IA, USA
Claire K. Latham Department of Accounting, College of
Business, Washington State University,
WA, USA
Tracy S. Manly School of Accounting, University of
Tulsa, OK, USA
James J. Maroney Accounting Group, College of Business
Administration, Northeastern University,
MA, USA
William A. Raabe Ohio State University, OH, USA
Timothy J. Rupert Accounting Group, College of Business
Administration, Northeastern University,
MA, USA
vii
Dennis Schmidt College of Business, Montana State
University, MT, USA
Craig T. Schulman Department of Economics, Texas A&M
University, TX, USA
Deborah W. Thomas Department of Accounting, Sam M.
Walton College of Business, University of
Arkansas, AR, USA
Gerald E. Whittenburg School of Accountancy, College of
Business Administration, San Diego State
University, CA, USA
LIST OF CONTRIBUTORSviii
EDITORIAL BOARD
Kenneth E. Anderson
University of Tennessee
Caroline K. Craig
Illinois State University
Anthony P. Curatola
Drexel University
Ted D. Englebrecht
Louisiana Tech University
Philip J. Harmelink
University of New Orleans
D. John Hasseldine
University of Nottingham
Peggy A. Hite
Indiana University-Bloomington
Beth B. Kern
Indiana University-South Bend
Gary A. McGill
University of Florida
Janet A. Meade
University of Houston
Michael L. Roberts
University of Colorado-Denver
David Ryan
Temple University
Dan L. Schisler
East Carolina University
Toby Stock
Ohio University
ix
AD HOC REVIEWERS
Lawrence Brown
Georgia State University
Michael Calegary
Santa Clara University
Deborah Garvey
Santa Clara University
Jeffrey Gramlich
University of Southern Maine
Robert Halperin
Hong Kong Polytechnic
University
Cherie Hennig
Florida International University
Mary Ann Hofmann
Andrews University
Yongtae Kim
Santa Clara University
Bruce Lubich
University of Maryland –
University College
Steven Matsunaga
University of Oregon
John Phillips
University of Connecticut
Debra Sanders
Washington State University
Michael Schadewald
University of Wisconsin-
Milwaukee
Jerrold Stern
Indiana University
Robert Yetman
University of California – Davis
xi
STATEMENT OF PURPOSE
Advances inTaxation is a refereed academic tax journal publis hed annually.
Academic articles on any aspect of Federal, state, local, or international
taxation will be considered. These include, but are not limited to, compli-
ance, education, law, planning, and policy. Interdisciplinary research in-
volving economics, finance, or other areas also is encouraged. Acceptable
research methods include any analytical, behavioral, descriptive, legal,
quantitative, survey, or theoretical approach appropriate to the project.
Manuscripts should be readable, relevant, and rigorous. To be readable,
manuscripts must be understandable and concise. To be relevant, manu-
scripts must be directly related to substantive issues inherent in the system of
taxation. To be rigorous, manuscripts should scrupulously follow the ten-
ants of sound research design and execution. Conclusions must follow log-
ically from the evidence and arguments presented. Reasonable assumptions
and logical development are essential for theoretical manuscripts.
AIT welcomes comments from readers.
Additional information regarding the journal is available at the Advances
in Taxation link at http://cms.scu.edu/business/accounting/ait.cfm
Editorial correspondence pertaining to manuscripts should be forwarded
to:
Professor Suzanne Luttman
Santa Clara University
Accounting Department
500 El Camino Real
Santa Clara, CA 95053
Suzanne Luttman
Series Editor
xiii
AN EXAMINATION OF TAX
SCHOLARS’ PUBLICATIONS
Anne L. Christensen and Claire K. Latham
ABSTRACT
This study examines the research productivity of three samples of tax
scholars with accounting Ph.Ds. We compare publication activity in the
pre-tenure period for each sample and in the first 25, 15, and 10 years for
scholars whose careers began in 1977/1978, 1987/1988, and 1993/1994,
respectively. The percentage of publications in ‘‘academic’’ journals in the
pre-tenure period has increased from 38 to 42 to 47 percent for the 77/78,
87/88, and 93/94 tax scholars, respectively. The average number of ac-
ademic and professional publications combined were 3.51 for 77/78
scholars, 5.87 for 87/88 scholars, and 4.00 for 93/94 scholars.
INTRODUCTION
Has the publication activity of tax accounting scholars changed over time?
In a study of where the 25 most productive accounting faculties published
from 1973 to 1977, Windal (1981, p. 656) states, ‘‘Tax specialists, of course,
tend to publish in tax journals.’’ He then identifies tax journals as The
Journal of Taxation, Taxes, and the Tax Adviser, a selection which indicates
that he expects tax scholars to publish their research primarily in ‘‘profes-
sional’’ journals, i.e., journals read primarily by tax practitioners. Kozub,
Sanders, and Raabe (1990) studied publication productivity by business
Advances in Taxation, Volume 17, 3–35
Copyright r 2007 by Elsevier Ltd.
All rights of reproduction in any form reserved
ISSN: 1058-7497/doi:10.1016/S1058-7497(06)17001-5
3
school tax faculties from 1981 to 1988 in eight academic and 22 professional
journals. They found that faculty members at eight of the 35 most prolific
tax publication schools published primarily in ‘‘academic’’ journals, i.e.,
journals direct ed toward academic audiences. Yet, at the three most pro-
ductive schools in their study, the tax scholars also published a significant
number of articles in professional journals.
The purpose of this study is to examine the overall publication produc-
tivity of tax scholars and to determine how much tax scholars publish in tax,
accounting, and other professional and academic journals in different stages
of their careers. Individuals listed in Prentice-Hall Accounting Faculty Di-
rectories (Hasselback, 1978–1997) with a teaching or research interest in tax
are designated tax scholars.
1
It is important to develop an understanding of
tax scholars’ publication activity because it is closely linked to promotion
and tenure decisions (Henderson, Ganesh, & Chandy, 1990) as well as salary
(Gomez-Mejia & Balkin, 1992). This information also may be helpful in
setting performance goals for and evaluating tax scholars at different stages
of their careers. There is increasing emphasis on assessment in university
settings, including assessing publica tion activity across scholars at different
stages in their careers (Swanson, 2004). In keeping with this growing in-
terest, our purpose is to capture a broad range of publication activity across
different journal classifications from the careers of scholars who have em-
phasized tax as a specialty.
Across universities, differences in focus and standards can signal that
publications in some journal s are more highly valued than those in other
journals (Schultz, Meade, & Khurana, 1989 ; Cargile & Bublit z, 1986). As
the mission of a particular school changes over time, so too may its em-
phasis on publications in different types of journals. Some universities may
emphasize and reward publication in professional journals as building
bridges to the professional tax community. Other universities may empha-
size publication in academic journals as expanding the boundaries of
knowledge and the reputation of the school. Still other schools may value
publications in educational journals as a means of improving pedagogy. The
degree to which work in other business disciplines is acknowledged also
varies among universities (Swanson, 2004). While there appears to be no
single standard for all universities for the publication activities of tax schol-
ars, we can see how much and where these scholars have successfully pub-
lished in different time periods in the past.
This study contributes to the tax scholar research productivity literature
by examining intradisciplinary and interdisciplinary publications in a wide
range of journals in several different time periods. We provide measures of
ANNE L. CHRISTENSEN AND CLAIRE K. LATHAM4
research productivity in tax, accounting, and non-tax/non-accounting jour-
nals in early as well as later time periods in scholars’ careers. Publication
activity in the highest-rated accounting journals is noted. Our productivity
measures are further divided into separate measures of publications in
journals with primarily professional or academic readership, thereby ex-
tending the discussion raised in prior literature.
We select three samples of tax scholars who received an accounting Ph.D.
and then took tenure track positions at U.S. universities. We then examine
their publication records in the first seven years of their careers as well as
during later time periods. We refer to scholars in the first seven years of their
careers as new scholars. The ‘‘93/94’’ sample consists of 1993 and 1994
graduates, the ‘‘87/88’’ sample of 1987 and 1988 graduates, and the ‘‘77/78’’
sample of 1977 and 1978 graduates. We then search ABI Inform, CCH
Federal Tax Articles, the EconLibrary Database, and the Social Science
Citation Index to develop publ ication records for each member of our sam-
ples.
2
We classify academic publications into three categories based on the
journals in which the articles appeared (1) tax, (2) accounting, and (3) non-
tax/non-accounting journals. We adopt the same classification strategy for
publications in professional journals. We also create a separate category for
publications in education journals. Academic and professional journals are
then differentiated on the basis of primary readership, which is determined
on the basis of publications such as Cabell’s Directory of Publishing Op-
portunities in Acco unting: 2001–2002.
In terms of overall productivity, we find that the 93/94 new tax accounting
scholars published an average of 4.0 articles in the first seven years of their
careers compared to 5.87 articles for the 87/88 scholars and 3.51 for the
77/78 scholars. We observe that while publications in professional journals
continue to be a significant part of tax scholars’ research portfolios, the
percentage of publications in academic journals has increased from 38 to 42
to 47 percent, respectively for 77/78, 87/88, and 93/94 new tax scholars. In
the latter part of their careers, the percentage of publications in academic
journals for the 77/78 and 87/88 scholars declines slightly, but not signifi-
cantly. In addition, we find that the aggregate number of articles published
in The Accounting Review by tax scholars in the first seven years of their
careers decreased from twelve to nine to four by the 77/78, 87/88, and 93/94
scholars, respectively.
The remainder of this article is organized as follows. The next section
describes the motivation and research questions. We then discuss the re-
search design followed by the results. The paper concludes with a discussion
of the findings and implications for future research.
An Examination of Tax Scholars’ Publications 5
MOTIVATION AND RESEARCH QUESTIONS
Overall Research Productivity Measures
Kozub et al. (1990) provide evidence on the publication activity of business
school tax faculty in 30 journal s (eight academic and 22 professional ) from
1981–1988. Their study is one of the few studies that specifically examines
the productivity of tax faculty and it includes many more tax journals than
any prior study. Christensen, Finger, and Latham (2002) show that research
productivity measures are affected by the number and type of journals in-
cluded. Their study documents considerably greater research productivity
for new accounting scholars when publications in non-accounting journals
are included in the productivity measures. This held true for scholars em-
ployed at both accounting doctoral and non-doctoral granting institutions.
As our starting point, we determine the research productivity of new tax
scholars using productivity measures that include publications from an ex-
tensive list of journals. The first research question is:
Question 1. How productive are new tax scholars when the productivity
measures include publications from an extensive list of tax, accounting,
and non-accounting journals?
We compute the average number of publications per new scholar in all
types of journals as wel l as in academic and professional journals. These
averages are computed separately for the 9 3/94, 87/88, and 77/78 scholars.
We further divide the samples into individuals employed at accounting
doctoral granting and non-doctoral granting schools be cause prior research
shows higher research productivity levels for the doctoral granting schools
(Christensen et al., 2002; Read, Rama, & Raghunandan, 1998; Englebrecht,
Iyer, & Patterson, 1994; Campbell & Morgan, 1987; Milne & Vent, 1987).
3
Differences in Productivity Measures for Publications in Professional
and Academic Journals
Windal ( 1981) suggested that tax facu lty would direct their pub lication efforts
toward a professional au dience. However, Kozub et al. (1990) find evidence o f
significant tax faculty publication efforts directed at both professional and
academic audiences. Bricker and Previts (1990) provide evidence that as the
nature of the professoriate changed and accounting scholars were required t o
have doctorates, accounting scholars shifted their research efforts toward ques-
tions of interest t o an academic audience rather than a p rofessional audience.
ANNE L. CHRISTENSEN AND CLAIRE K. LATHAM6
They sugges t that this shift may have isolated the ac ademic community from
the practice community. We examine whether new tax scholars, who started
their careers in three different time periods, in clude pub lications in pro fessional
journals in their research portfolios. Hence, o ur second question is:
Question 2. Has the quantity of new tax accounting scholars’ publications
in professional journals changed over time?
If we find that tax scholars who received their degrees at different points
in time publish a substantial amount in professional journals as well as in
academic journals, it suggest s that tax scholars have not become isolated
from the professional tax community.
Publications in Highest Rated Journals
New scholars’ publication records are evaluat ed in terms of both quantity
and quality. A number of studies have measured perceptions of the quality
of accounting, business, and tax journals over the years (Swanson, 2004 ;
Brown & Huefner, 1994; Hall & Ross, 1991; Hull & Wright, 1990; Raabe,
Kozub, & Sanders, 1987). Although schools and individuals do differ in
perceptions of which journals are of highest quality, we can use the con-
sistently top-rated journals from prior studies to observe the frequency with
which tax scholars publish in specific journals and whether there have been
changes in publication rates over time. Thus our third research question is:
Question 3. Has the tendency for new tax scholars, as a group, to publish
in the highest rated tax and accounting journals changed over time?
We provide information on the number of articles published by new tax
scholars in highly rated as well as common outlets.
Timing within Careers: Academic and Professional Publications
The importance of publishing in academic journals has increased over
time (Ettredge & Wong-On-Wing, 1991; Hagerman & Hagerman, 1989;
Campbell & Morgan, 1987). Such pressure may lead tax scholars to focus
their early research efforts on empirical or theoretical work publishable in
academic journals. However, there is also pressur e to have a sufficient
number of publications in particular time periods. Zivney, Berton, and
Gavin (1995, p. 11) found that only 40 percent of accounting graduates
publish in academic accounting journals and 23 percent publish in what they
define as the top three accounting journals (The Accounting Review, Journal
An Examination of Tax Scholars’ Publications 7
[...]... Publications in Professional Journals 10 0% % of 14 4 Cum % # % of 15 6 Cum.% 10 3 6 12 9 16 17 22 16 15 11 7 6.9 2 .1 4.2 8.3 6.3 11 .1 11. 8 15 .3 11 .1 10.4 7.6 4.9 6.9 9.0 13 .2 21. 5 27.8 38.9 50.7 66.0 77 .1 87.5 95 .1 100.0 22 7 5 14 15 14 18 14 12 8 9 18 14 .1 4.5 3.2 9.0 9.6 9.0 11 .5 9.0 7.7 5 .1 5.8 11 .5 14 .1 18.6 21. 8 30.8 40.4 49.4 60.9 69.9 77.6 82.7 88.5 10 0.0 14 4 10 .7 13 .7 17 .4 26 .1 34 .1 44 .1 55.8 67.8... (2) 4 (4) 0 1 (1) 12 (10 ) 0 3 (2) 3 (3) 8 (4) 3 (3) 0 4 (3) 3 (3) 4 (2) 0 4 (3) 9 (5) 1 (1) 17 (7) 7 (3) 3 (2) 5 (4) 15 (6) 0 0 6 (5) 0 2 (2) 2 (1) 4 (4) J of Taxation (19 15) Tax Adviser (19 10) Tax for Acct /PTSb (19 38) Taxes (19 23) 3 (2) 17 (7) 12 (9) 8 (5) 10 (7) 16 (8) 17 (9) 23 (11 ) 4 (3) 18 (10 ) 25 (10 ) 15 (7) 17 (9) 44 (14 ) 28 (11 ) 36 (10 ) 0 9 (2) 0 7 (4) 7 26 17 14 (6) (15 ) (11 ) (11 ) 15 Publications... 22 1 25 4 36 3 20 7 12 14 26 6 17 4 15 29 11 7 21 23 6 15 10 2 13 14 14 14 1 5 8 9 6 12 13 9 7 4 4 7 6 7 6 8 2 5 7 2 1 7 14 15 9 10 0 3 8 1 2 5 14 4 6 14 7 5 270 15 8 96 252 506 51 177 12 7 29 15 9 325 15 3 93 31 67 93 18 1 ANNE L CHRISTENSEN AND CLAIRE K LATHAM 93/94 87/88 77/78 93/94 87/88 77/78 93/94 87/88 77/78 93/94 87/88 77/78 93/94 87/88 77/78 93/94 87/88 77/78 (1) (1) (1) (2) (2) (2) (1) (1) (1) ... 2 .19 1. 68 1. 00 1. 90 4.04 2.00 5.05 9.53 6.00 12 .29 3.82 3.00 3 .19 3.74 3.00 3.90 1. 92 1. 00 2.48 2.09 2.00 1. 92 3 .13 3.00 2.38 5 .12 2.00 6.50 1. 32 1. 00 1. 64 1. 17 1. 00 1. 34 0.53 0 1. 02 0.65 0 1. 27 1. 04 0 1. 69 1. 21 1.001. 69 0.82 1. 00 0.87 3.96 3.00 4.67 2.96 1. 00 3.69 0.55 0 1. 04 3.78 7.35 1. 00 3.00 6.68 16 . 21 2.50 2.00 2.75 2.87 2.00 2.89 1. 11 0.00 2. 21 1.03 1. 00 1. 69 3.00 1. 00 4.82 An Examination of Tax... 33 18 26 20 25 22 19 19 13 14 14 16 14 8.3 10 .5 5.8 8.3 6.4 8.0 7.0 6 .1 6 .1 4.2 4.5 4.5 5.0 4.5 313 19 .1 29.6 35.4 43.7 50 .1 58 .1 65 .1 71. 2 77.3 81. 5 86.0 90.5 95.5 10 0.0 10 0% Panel C: 77/78 sample (N ¼ 45 scholars) Year Relative to Graduation All Publications % of 664 Cum % 10 7 23 22 28 19 24 25 30 42 1. 5 1.1 3.5 3.3 4.2 2.9 3.6 3.8 4.5 6.3 1. 5 2.6 6 .1 9.4 13 .6 16 .5 20 .1 23.9 28.4 34.7 # % of 216 ... 28.4 34.7 # % of 216 3 1 5 6 13 8 12 12 10 17 1. 4 0.5 2.3 2.8 6.0 3.7 5.6 5.6 4.6 7.9 Publications in Professional Journals Cum % # % of 448 Cum.% 1. 4 1. 9 4.2 7.0 13 .0 16 .7 22.3 27.9 32.5 40.3 7 6 18 16 15 11 12 13 20 25 1. 6 1. 3 4.0 3.6 3.3 2.5 2.7 2.9 4.5 5.6 1. 6 2.9 6.9 10 .5 13 .8 16 .3 19 .0 21. 9 26.3 31. 9 19 Pre-Ph.D 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Publications in Academic Journals An Examination of Tax Scholars’... 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 20 Table 3 (Continued ) Panel C: 77/78 sample (N ¼ 45 scholars) Year Relative to Graduation All Publications % of 664 Cum % Total 26 27 28 27 33 31 22 30 38 18 17 28 30 28 27 10 14 3.9 4 .1 4.2 4 .1 5.0 4.7 3.3 4.5 5.7 2.7 2.5 4.2 4.5 4.2 4 .1 1.5 2 .1 664 10 0% 38.6 42.7 46.9 51. 0 56.0 60.7 64.0 68.5 74.2 76.9 79.4 83.6 88 .1 92.3 96.4 97.9 10 0.0 # % of 216 6 9 7 11 11 12 8 9 14 3... 4.2 3.2 5 .1 5 .1 5.6 3.7 4.2 6.3 1. 4 2.8 3.2 1. 9 2.8 2.8 3.2 1. 4 216 10 0% Publications in Professional Journals Cum % # % of 448 Cum.% 43 .1 47.3 50.5 55.6 60.7 66.3 70.0 74.2 80.5 81. 9 84.7 87.9 89.8 92.6 95.4 98.6 10 0.0 20 18 21 16 22 19 14 21 24 15 11 21 26 22 21 3 11 4.5 4.0 4.7 3.6 4.9 4.2 3 .1 4.7 5.4 3.3 2.5 4.7 5.8 4.9 4.7 0.6 2.5 36.4 40.4 45 .1 48.7 53.6 57.8 60.9 65.6 71. 0 74.3 76.8 81. 5 87.3... 8 9 10 Publications in Academic Journals Total 46 53 39 48 37 39 36 32 26 25 21 23 24 26 8.8 10 .2 7.5 9.2 7 .1 7.5 6.9 6 .1 5.0 4.8 4.0 4.4 4.5 5.0 522 17 .8 28.0 35.5 44.7 51. 8 59.3 66.2 72.3 77.3 82 .1 86 .1 90.5 95.0 10 0.0 10 0% 20 20 21 22 17 14 14 13 7 12 7 9 8 12 9.6 9.6 10 .0 10 .5 8 .1 6.7 6.7 6.2 3.3 5.7 3.3 4.3 3.8 5.7 209 15 .8 25.4 35.4 45.9 54 .1 60.8 67.5 73.7 77.0 82.8 86 .1 90.4 94.3 10 0.0 10 0%... Assoc (19 79) Adv InTaxation (19 87) National Tax J (19 48) 25 (13 )a 4 (4) 2 (2) 18 (13 ) 10 (7) 3 (3) 4 (4) 0 2 (2) 16 (10 ) 7 (6) 1 (1) 18 (11 ) 2 (1) 5 (5) 7 (6) 2 (2) 4 (3) Acct Horizons (19 87) Acct Org & Soc (19 76) Accounting Review (19 26) Cont Acct Res (19 84) J of Acct & Econ (19 79) J Acct & Pub Pol (19 82) J of Acct Research (19 63) 3 (3) 0 4 (3) 2 (2) 5 (3) 5 (5) 5 (4) 5 (4) 0 9 (6) 3 (3) 2 (1) 2 (2) . (6) 10 (7) 4 (3) 17 (9) 0 Tax Adviser (19 10) 17 (7) 26 (15 ) 16 (8) 18 (10 ) 44 (14 ) 9 (2) Tax. for Acct. /PTS b (19 38) 12 (9) 17 (11 ) 17 (9) 25 (10 ) 28 (11 ) 0 Taxes (19 23) 8 (5) 14 (11 ) 23 (11 ) 15 . 1. 04 1. 21 Median 1. 00 1. 00 1. 00 0 1. 00 1. 00 3.00 3.00 1. 00 2.00 3.00 2.00 1. 00 1. 00 0 0 0 1. 00 Standard deviation 2.28 3 .16 2 .10 1. 54 2.30 5.38 3 .19 3.90 2.48 1. 92 2.38 6.50 1. 64 1. 34 1. 02 1. 27 1. 69. ¼ 51 scholars) J. of Am. Tax Assoc. (19 79) 25 (13 ) a 18 (13 ) 4 (4) 16 (10 ) 18 (11 ) 7 (6) Adv. In Taxation (19 87) 4 (4) 10 (7) 0 7 (6) 2 (1) 2 (2) National Tax J. (19 48) 2 (2) 3 (3) 2 (2) 1 (1)