This paper is the first in a series of three studies looking at tax compliance using administrative data from Rwanda. It discusses the use of administrative data for tax research – specifically anonymised taxpayers records, which have become increasingly available on the African continent. The paper starts by critically summarising the key advantages and disadvantages of using this data for tax research in Africa. It proceeds to illustrate these opportunities and challenges in practice, using the case of Rwanda for application of the data to analyse tax compliance and progressivity. By doing this it shows some stylised facts – for example that tax systems designed to be progressive can still be regressive in practice, that a great share of ...
Tax administrations in low-income countries engage in a variety of interventions to improve taxpayer...
Administrative data from tax returns have recently become available in many African countries thanks...
The tax compliance behaviour of the public sector has been largely neglected in the tax literature. ...
This brief summarises the findings from five ICTD working papers produced from a research project co...
Large-scale field experiments on tax compliance have been a thriving field of research in many regio...
Low-income countries are increasing their fiscal independence through the improvement of domestic ta...
As they increasingly adopt digital infrastructure, public administrations worldwide are increasingly...
Increasing emphasis is being placed on the need for low income countries to collect more tax revenue...
"Tax administration reforms are of prime importance for strengthening fiscal state and governance re...
Implicit within the African fiscal architecture are embedded vulnerabilities to exogenous factors wh...
Although field experiments in tax compliance represent a growing area of research, the literature ha...
This paper proposes (i) a new database of tax revenue for 42 Sub-Saharan African countries (SSA) ove...
Revenue administrations collect large amounts of data on individuals and firms in the course of thei...
A paper presented by San Lio,Chandaria School of Business and John M.Mirichii, Chandaria School of B...
Tax administration reforms are of prime importance for strengthening fiscal state and governance rel...
Tax administrations in low-income countries engage in a variety of interventions to improve taxpayer...
Administrative data from tax returns have recently become available in many African countries thanks...
The tax compliance behaviour of the public sector has been largely neglected in the tax literature. ...
This brief summarises the findings from five ICTD working papers produced from a research project co...
Large-scale field experiments on tax compliance have been a thriving field of research in many regio...
Low-income countries are increasing their fiscal independence through the improvement of domestic ta...
As they increasingly adopt digital infrastructure, public administrations worldwide are increasingly...
Increasing emphasis is being placed on the need for low income countries to collect more tax revenue...
"Tax administration reforms are of prime importance for strengthening fiscal state and governance re...
Implicit within the African fiscal architecture are embedded vulnerabilities to exogenous factors wh...
Although field experiments in tax compliance represent a growing area of research, the literature ha...
This paper proposes (i) a new database of tax revenue for 42 Sub-Saharan African countries (SSA) ove...
Revenue administrations collect large amounts of data on individuals and firms in the course of thei...
A paper presented by San Lio,Chandaria School of Business and John M.Mirichii, Chandaria School of B...
Tax administration reforms are of prime importance for strengthening fiscal state and governance rel...
Tax administrations in low-income countries engage in a variety of interventions to improve taxpayer...
Administrative data from tax returns have recently become available in many African countries thanks...
The tax compliance behaviour of the public sector has been largely neglected in the tax literature. ...