In low-income countries, citizens often pay ‘taxes’ that differ substantially from what is required by statute. These non-statutory taxes are central to financing both local public goods and maintaining informal governance institutions. This study captures the incidence of informal taxation and taxpayer perspectives onthese payments. It is based on a taxpayer survey, in-depth interviews with government and chiefdom officials, and focus group discussions with community stakeholders across three districts of Sierra Leone. We find, first, that informal taxes are a prevalent reality within areas of weak formal statehoodin Sierra Leone, with households pa...
This ICTD Summary Brief is one of six special research synthesis pieces produced at the end of the I...
Most people in low-income countries contribute substantially to the financing of local public goods ...
In recent years, domestic and international policy attention has often focused on broadening the tax...
In low-income countries, citizens often pay ‘taxes’ that differ substantially from what is required ...
In low-income and post-conflict countries, and particularly in rural areas, citizens often pay a ran...
How states raise revenue is critical to understanding how they govern. Orthodox analyses of the stat...
This paper considers how men and women in eastern and northern Sierra Leone interact differently wit...
Informal payments are a frequently overlooked source of local public fi nance in developing countri...
This paper considers how men and women in eastern and northern Sierra Leone interact differently wit...
What drives tax compliance among informal workers and does it affect demands for political represent...
In this paper an attempt has been made to apply to the area of local taxation in developing countrie...
Abstract Governments often have contentious relationships with residents of urban infor...
What drives tax compliance among informal workers, and how does compliance affect their policy prefe...
This article provides a ground-level view of market taxation in two local government areas in Ghana’...
Effective domestic revenue mobilization has gained renewed urgency, especially in the light of the n...
This ICTD Summary Brief is one of six special research synthesis pieces produced at the end of the I...
Most people in low-income countries contribute substantially to the financing of local public goods ...
In recent years, domestic and international policy attention has often focused on broadening the tax...
In low-income countries, citizens often pay ‘taxes’ that differ substantially from what is required ...
In low-income and post-conflict countries, and particularly in rural areas, citizens often pay a ran...
How states raise revenue is critical to understanding how they govern. Orthodox analyses of the stat...
This paper considers how men and women in eastern and northern Sierra Leone interact differently wit...
Informal payments are a frequently overlooked source of local public fi nance in developing countri...
This paper considers how men and women in eastern and northern Sierra Leone interact differently wit...
What drives tax compliance among informal workers and does it affect demands for political represent...
In this paper an attempt has been made to apply to the area of local taxation in developing countrie...
Abstract Governments often have contentious relationships with residents of urban infor...
What drives tax compliance among informal workers, and how does compliance affect their policy prefe...
This article provides a ground-level view of market taxation in two local government areas in Ghana’...
Effective domestic revenue mobilization has gained renewed urgency, especially in the light of the n...
This ICTD Summary Brief is one of six special research synthesis pieces produced at the end of the I...
Most people in low-income countries contribute substantially to the financing of local public goods ...
In recent years, domestic and international policy attention has often focused on broadening the tax...