This article provides a ground-level view of market taxation in two local government areas in Ghana’s relatively disadvantaged northern region. It describes a system shaped by informal practices that are grounded in social relationships and collective norms, which sometimes foster greater equity and in other cases serve to reinforce existing inequalities. The evidence suggests the need for a more nuanced understanding of the highly informal and socially embedded realities of local tax collection, and the possibility that improved outcomes could be achieved by “working with the grain” of these inescapable local realities, while seeking to minimize potential costs of informality
This thesis re-evaluates the relationship between formal and informal work in third world cities. Un...
This dataset is from a study conducted on taxation and service delivery in Lusaka’s informal markets...
In low-income countries, citizens often pay ‘taxes’ that differ substantially from what ...
This article provides a ground-level view of market taxation in two local government areas in Ghana’...
Over the past decade, the Ghanaian government has tried to include and accommodate the many people w...
An analysis of multiple sources of evidence, including field interviews and non-participant observat...
This paper challenges the notion that taxing the informal economy provides a mechanism for increasin...
This thesis investigates how differences in social structures and their associated processes influen...
This thesis re-evaluates the relationship between formal and informal work in third world cities. Un...
This dissertation addresses the role that tribal chiefs play in electoral politics in sub-Saharan Af...
This article aims to assess whether or not property rates in Ghana are a good potential source of lo...
Tax compliance is a major concern as states try to increase state revenues in order to provide servi...
Political governance in Tamale, Northern Ghana, is complicated by the conflict between the two royal...
What drives tax compliance among informal workers and does it affect demands for political represent...
Local governance in many developing countries attracts several stakeholders who maintain a lot of si...
This thesis re-evaluates the relationship between formal and informal work in third world cities. Un...
This dataset is from a study conducted on taxation and service delivery in Lusaka’s informal markets...
In low-income countries, citizens often pay ‘taxes’ that differ substantially from what ...
This article provides a ground-level view of market taxation in two local government areas in Ghana’...
Over the past decade, the Ghanaian government has tried to include and accommodate the many people w...
An analysis of multiple sources of evidence, including field interviews and non-participant observat...
This paper challenges the notion that taxing the informal economy provides a mechanism for increasin...
This thesis investigates how differences in social structures and their associated processes influen...
This thesis re-evaluates the relationship between formal and informal work in third world cities. Un...
This dissertation addresses the role that tribal chiefs play in electoral politics in sub-Saharan Af...
This article aims to assess whether or not property rates in Ghana are a good potential source of lo...
Tax compliance is a major concern as states try to increase state revenues in order to provide servi...
Political governance in Tamale, Northern Ghana, is complicated by the conflict between the two royal...
What drives tax compliance among informal workers and does it affect demands for political represent...
Local governance in many developing countries attracts several stakeholders who maintain a lot of si...
This thesis re-evaluates the relationship between formal and informal work in third world cities. Un...
This dataset is from a study conducted on taxation and service delivery in Lusaka’s informal markets...
In low-income countries, citizens often pay ‘taxes’ that differ substantially from what ...