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The effects of personality traits on digital transformation: Evidence from German tax consulting
Affiliation:1. Department of Accounting, Monash Business School, Monash University, Victoria, Australia;2. The Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia;3. Sydney, New South Wales, Australia;4. Luminate QR, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia;1. University of Adelaide, Adelaide Business School, 10 Pulteney Street, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia;2. Delft University of Technology, Faculty of Technology, Policy and Management, Jaffalaan 5, NL-2600, GA, Delft, Netherlands;3. University of Birmingham, Birmingham Business School, University House, Birmingham, B15 2TT, United Kingdom;4. RMIT University, School of Accounting, 445 Swanston Street, Melbourne, Victoria, 3000, Australia;5. Department of Taxation, College of Accounting Sciences, University of South Africa, Preller Street, Muckleneuk, Pretoria, South Africa;6. University of Glasgow, Adam Smith Business School, Glasgow, G12 8QQ, United Kingdom
Abstract:Digitization is said to strongly disrupt business and professional life. Especially tax consulting has aroused public interest in this respect. Frey and Osborne (2017) even go so far as to predict that tax consulting will become obsolete. Although these statements are misleading without further interpretation, there is no denying the fact that some change in the accounting and tax profession is inevitable. In Germany, however, business digitization currently does not seem to be urgently necessary in the tax consulting field since this profession is protected by law from competition. Thus, by examining the digitization efforts of German tax consultants we are able to exclude almost all effects of outside pressure and therefore take a look at intrinsic motivation. This study focuses on psychological factors and explores the relationship between tax consultants' Big-Five personality and their level of digitization. Personality is measured using the ten-item Big-Five inventory provided by Rammstedt and John (2007). We develop a digital maturity model based on 20 questions relating to digitization in business and tax consulting. After carrying out a factor analysis, five factors are extracted. To interpret our results, we develop two business model transformation indices as well as an overall digitization index. Our analysis is based on a survey of 968 members of the chamber of tax consultants (Steuerberaterkammer) in Munich, Germany. We are able to show that tax consultants scoring high on extraversion and openness to experience and low on neuroticism exhibit a higher level of digitization. This is, to the best of our knowledge, the first study to discuss intrinsic motivation and digitization in an accounting context. Moreover, an index for digitization as a whole and two business model transformation indices are provided, shedding light upon a hard-to-grasp phenomenon.
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