2019
DOI: 10.3390/economies7030077
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

A New Approach to Measuring Tax Effort

Abstract: This paper attempts to extend the theoretical and empirical methodology employed in previous literature, by proposing a utility maximization process to estimate the optimal tax revenue from a sample of 30 countries. It is shown that an optimal tax system is defined solely by two crucial determining factors: The productive capacity of the country (GDP) and consumers' preferences (consumption spending). All the other variables can be disregarded, as macroeconomic determinants (GDP, consumption) tend to capture t… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
14
0

Year Published

2020
2020
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
5
1
1

Relationship

0
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 7 publications
(14 citation statements)
references
References 23 publications
0
14
0
Order By: Relevance
“…While these approaches are informative on how tax performance compares to some baseline standard, they are limited in identifying the sources of over-or under-performance. It is worth remembering that these measures are based on comparison of performance to some averages for other countries rather than an 'optimization' based on factors specific to an individual country (as in Dalamagas et al 2019)-these factors are swept up in the residual.…”
Section: Conceptual Framework: Tax Performance and Capacitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While these approaches are informative on how tax performance compares to some baseline standard, they are limited in identifying the sources of over-or under-performance. It is worth remembering that these measures are based on comparison of performance to some averages for other countries rather than an 'optimization' based on factors specific to an individual country (as in Dalamagas et al 2019)-these factors are swept up in the residual.…”
Section: Conceptual Framework: Tax Performance and Capacitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The importance of taking into account the relationship between the development of institutions and the amount of tax revenues was also confirmed by Bird et al (2008). A recent study by Dalamagas et al (2019) justified the predominant influence on tax revenues of two economic factors: GDP as a characteristic of production potential and consumer preferences. Despite the numerous tax capacity models available, the architecture of tax systems in many developing countries is characterized by paradoxes (Gordon and Li, 2009).…”
Section: Literature Viewmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Regarding the identified difficulty of taxing Agricultural activities, there is an agreement with Dalamagas et al (2019), Godin and Hindriks (2015), Thackray and Ueda (2014), Crivelly and Gupta (2014), Botlhole et al (2012), Martinez-Vazquez and Bird (2011), Pessino and Fenochietto (2010), Keen and Lockwood (2010), Aizenman and Jinjirak (2008), Bird et al (2008), Gupta (2007), Bird et al (2004), Ebrill et al (2001). Only some of the researchers (CASE 2020; Piancastelli and Thirlwall 2020; Motsatsi 2018; Ufier 2014) found the relationship to not be statistically significant, while even more rare was the existence of a negative and statistically significant relationship between agriculture and tax revenues such as in Agbeyegbe, Stotsky, and WoldeMariam (2014), who specifically focused on sub-Saharan Africa, where most of the agricultural production is exported to and not produced internally.…”
Section: Conclusion Recommendations and Future Researchmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…In international literature, special emphasis has been given to whether or not agriculture and its share of an economy's GDP affects tax evasion and the VAT gap. Such studies include those of the CASE institute (2020), Piancastelli and Thirlwall (2020), Dalamagas, Palaios, and Tantos (2019), Motsatsi (2018), Cnossen (2018), Zidkova (2016), Godin and Hindriks (2015), Thackray και Ueda (2014), Crivelly and Gupta (2014), Betliy (2014), Ufier (2014), Botlhole, Asafu-Adjaye, and Carmignani (2012), Martinez-Vazquez and Bird (2011), Pessino and Fenochietto (2010), Keen and Lockwood (2010), Aizenman και Jinjirak (2008), Bird, Martinez-Vazquez, andTorgler (2008), Gupta (2007), Bird et al (2004) and Ebrill et al (2001). The results from each of these studies varied greatly, mainly due to the fact that the agricultural sector is hard to tax and most of the studies concern crosscountry data.…”
Section: Agriculture Forestry and Fishingmentioning
confidence: 99%