The adoption of information and communication technologies (ICTs) in the public sector, including for tax administration, has been hailed as potentially transformational over the last few decades. Its impact has been less far-reaching than imagined. A literature examining the determinants of – and obstacles to – ICT adoption arose as a result, almost exclusively focusing on the experience of high-income countries. However, understanding the experience of adoption in low-income countries is equally important, especially given the potential role that ICTs can play in tackling various development issues, including increasing mobilisation of domestic revenue. To help fill this gap, we present two in-depth case studies of the proc...
This paper focuses on the implications of Information and Communication Technology on Tax administra...
Recently, there has been an expansion in the deployment of digital systems and digital IDs among ta...
African economies need adequate revenues for development, but weak tax laws, illicit financial flows...
Many low-income countries are increasingly digitising various tax services, usually motivated by eff...
National tax administrations are increasingly investing in the digital facilities needed to make it ...
The increasing digitalisation of African economies over the past decade, and the spread of mobile mo...
Information communication technology (ICT) is an important tool to support local governments in thei...
New digital technologies are now being widely used in Africa and lower-income countries (LICs). This...
The dwindling global fortune occasioned by the fall in the price of crude oil, the major source of w...
Kenya, as with other developing countries, has joined the global bandwagon of using digital technolo...
This article examines how the use of ICT has modernized Tax administration procedures and improved r...
Transitioning to an electronic system for tax administration and collection is a welcome development...
The study used cross sectional study design and data were collected from business owners operating w...
A Project Report Submitted To the Chandaria School of Business in Partial Fulfilment of the Requirem...
The widespread introduction of information and communication technologies (ICTs) and digitalised dat...
This paper focuses on the implications of Information and Communication Technology on Tax administra...
Recently, there has been an expansion in the deployment of digital systems and digital IDs among ta...
African economies need adequate revenues for development, but weak tax laws, illicit financial flows...
Many low-income countries are increasingly digitising various tax services, usually motivated by eff...
National tax administrations are increasingly investing in the digital facilities needed to make it ...
The increasing digitalisation of African economies over the past decade, and the spread of mobile mo...
Information communication technology (ICT) is an important tool to support local governments in thei...
New digital technologies are now being widely used in Africa and lower-income countries (LICs). This...
The dwindling global fortune occasioned by the fall in the price of crude oil, the major source of w...
Kenya, as with other developing countries, has joined the global bandwagon of using digital technolo...
This article examines how the use of ICT has modernized Tax administration procedures and improved r...
Transitioning to an electronic system for tax administration and collection is a welcome development...
The study used cross sectional study design and data were collected from business owners operating w...
A Project Report Submitted To the Chandaria School of Business in Partial Fulfilment of the Requirem...
The widespread introduction of information and communication technologies (ICTs) and digitalised dat...
This paper focuses on the implications of Information and Communication Technology on Tax administra...
Recently, there has been an expansion in the deployment of digital systems and digital IDs among ta...
African economies need adequate revenues for development, but weak tax laws, illicit financial flows...