Integrating ICT skills and tax software in tax education: A survey of Malaysian tax practitioners' perspectives

Purpose: This study aims to examine the ICT skills needed by a fresh accounting graduate when first joining a tax firm; to find out usage of electronic tax (e-tax) applications in tax practice; to assess the rating of senior tax practitioners on fresh graduates' ICT and e-tax applications skill...

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Published in:Campus-Wide Information Systems
Main Author: Ling L.M.; Nawawi N.H.A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2010
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-78649270743&doi=10.1108%2f10650741011087748&partnerID=40&md5=de3569c816a0ca36427bef6cdc102ffa
id 2-s2.0-78649270743
spelling 2-s2.0-78649270743
Ling L.M.; Nawawi N.H.A.
Integrating ICT skills and tax software in tax education: A survey of Malaysian tax practitioners' perspectives
2010
Campus-Wide Information Systems
27
5
10.1108/10650741011087748
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-78649270743&doi=10.1108%2f10650741011087748&partnerID=40&md5=de3569c816a0ca36427bef6cdc102ffa
Purpose: This study aims to examine the ICT skills needed by a fresh accounting graduate when first joining a tax firm; to find out usage of electronic tax (e-tax) applications in tax practice; to assess the rating of senior tax practitioners on fresh graduates' ICT and e-tax applications skills; and to solicit tax practitioners' opinion regarding integrating ICT skills and tax software into a tax course. Design/methodology/approach: An online survey method was used to collect the data. An online survey was distributed to 385 tax practitioners who worked in the accounting/tax firms that participated in the university's internship programs. A total of 112 usable questionnaires were analyzed. Findings: The survey found that the three most important ICT skills with which fresh graduates should be familiar before graduating were spreadsheet software, word-processing software, and e-mail. The result shows that the usage of e-tax applications is still not pervasive in tax practice. Overall, senior tax practitioners rated fresh accounting graduates' ICT skills as "average". Both senior (75 percent) and junior (73.7 percent) tax practitioners agreed that ICT skills and tax software should be integrated in the tax course offered by the universities. Practical implications: This study has provided insights to policy makers and tax educators to revamp the existing tax curriculum, and to introduce learning tax software in classes, and to place more emphasis in imparting ICT skills in tax education. Originality/value: Scholarly study on tax education and ICT is scant. Little is known about whether the existing tax education is adequate in meeting the needs of the employers in the job market. This paper has emerged to fill a knowledge gap. © Emerald Group Publishing Limited.

10650741
English
Article

author Ling L.M.; Nawawi N.H.A.
spellingShingle Ling L.M.; Nawawi N.H.A.
Integrating ICT skills and tax software in tax education: A survey of Malaysian tax practitioners' perspectives
author_facet Ling L.M.; Nawawi N.H.A.
author_sort Ling L.M.; Nawawi N.H.A.
title Integrating ICT skills and tax software in tax education: A survey of Malaysian tax practitioners' perspectives
title_short Integrating ICT skills and tax software in tax education: A survey of Malaysian tax practitioners' perspectives
title_full Integrating ICT skills and tax software in tax education: A survey of Malaysian tax practitioners' perspectives
title_fullStr Integrating ICT skills and tax software in tax education: A survey of Malaysian tax practitioners' perspectives
title_full_unstemmed Integrating ICT skills and tax software in tax education: A survey of Malaysian tax practitioners' perspectives
title_sort Integrating ICT skills and tax software in tax education: A survey of Malaysian tax practitioners' perspectives
publishDate 2010
container_title Campus-Wide Information Systems
container_volume 27
container_issue 5
doi_str_mv 10.1108/10650741011087748
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-78649270743&doi=10.1108%2f10650741011087748&partnerID=40&md5=de3569c816a0ca36427bef6cdc102ffa
description Purpose: This study aims to examine the ICT skills needed by a fresh accounting graduate when first joining a tax firm; to find out usage of electronic tax (e-tax) applications in tax practice; to assess the rating of senior tax practitioners on fresh graduates' ICT and e-tax applications skills; and to solicit tax practitioners' opinion regarding integrating ICT skills and tax software into a tax course. Design/methodology/approach: An online survey method was used to collect the data. An online survey was distributed to 385 tax practitioners who worked in the accounting/tax firms that participated in the university's internship programs. A total of 112 usable questionnaires were analyzed. Findings: The survey found that the three most important ICT skills with which fresh graduates should be familiar before graduating were spreadsheet software, word-processing software, and e-mail. The result shows that the usage of e-tax applications is still not pervasive in tax practice. Overall, senior tax practitioners rated fresh accounting graduates' ICT skills as "average". Both senior (75 percent) and junior (73.7 percent) tax practitioners agreed that ICT skills and tax software should be integrated in the tax course offered by the universities. Practical implications: This study has provided insights to policy makers and tax educators to revamp the existing tax curriculum, and to introduce learning tax software in classes, and to place more emphasis in imparting ICT skills in tax education. Originality/value: Scholarly study on tax education and ICT is scant. Little is known about whether the existing tax education is adequate in meeting the needs of the employers in the job market. This paper has emerged to fill a knowledge gap. © Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
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