tax, tax administration, revenue, politicsThis paper is focused on the question: why do the governments of low income countries not raise more tax revenues? Two different but complementary approaches are used to answer it. The first approach is comparisons: among countries today, and within countries over time. This approach tends to generate relatively conservative answers to the central question. It leads to an emphasis on the ‘sticky’ nature of the taxation. For any individual country in ‘normal times’ – i.e. excluding situations of war, major internal conflict, the collapse or rapid reconstruction of state power - revenue collections, measured as a proportion of GDP, do not change much from year to year. This is partly because effective...
We explore the impact of major revenue mobilization episodes on income distribution dynamics using a...
The proposal made in this paper is a modest one: that high-income countries should further the cause...
Developing countries have concluded thousands of bilateral tax treaties, which restrict their ‘taxin...
tax, tax administration, revenue, politicsThis paper is focused on the question: why do the governme...
A brief review of the literature, informed by comments from a range of tax specialists, suggests fo...
Low-income countries typically collect taxes of between 10 to 20 percent of GDP while the average fo...
Tax reform constitutes one of the core areas of recent economic reform programs in the developing co...
tax structure; fiscal policy; economic growth; development.This paper investigates the relationship ...
The world’s lower-income countries face an urgent need for public revenue to build social and econom...
As leaders gather together at the African Union summit, new analysis from the Institute of Developme...
government revenue; low-income countries; transfer mispricing; mining tax; tax exemptions; property ...
At a time of growing inequality and under-investment in public infrastructure, my re- search has foc...
In recent years, domestic revenue mobilisation in developing countries gained increasing prominence...
Tax revenue funds the provision of public goods, but poor countries struggle to raise taxes. In fact...
Increasing tax revenues in low income countries is essential to address future development finance r...
We explore the impact of major revenue mobilization episodes on income distribution dynamics using a...
The proposal made in this paper is a modest one: that high-income countries should further the cause...
Developing countries have concluded thousands of bilateral tax treaties, which restrict their ‘taxin...
tax, tax administration, revenue, politicsThis paper is focused on the question: why do the governme...
A brief review of the literature, informed by comments from a range of tax specialists, suggests fo...
Low-income countries typically collect taxes of between 10 to 20 percent of GDP while the average fo...
Tax reform constitutes one of the core areas of recent economic reform programs in the developing co...
tax structure; fiscal policy; economic growth; development.This paper investigates the relationship ...
The world’s lower-income countries face an urgent need for public revenue to build social and econom...
As leaders gather together at the African Union summit, new analysis from the Institute of Developme...
government revenue; low-income countries; transfer mispricing; mining tax; tax exemptions; property ...
At a time of growing inequality and under-investment in public infrastructure, my re- search has foc...
In recent years, domestic revenue mobilisation in developing countries gained increasing prominence...
Tax revenue funds the provision of public goods, but poor countries struggle to raise taxes. In fact...
Increasing tax revenues in low income countries is essential to address future development finance r...
We explore the impact of major revenue mobilization episodes on income distribution dynamics using a...
The proposal made in this paper is a modest one: that high-income countries should further the cause...
Developing countries have concluded thousands of bilateral tax treaties, which restrict their ‘taxin...