“…Several studies find a strong negative relationship between the relative size of the agricultural sector and a country's level of per capita income and tax revenues as a share of GDP (Tanzi, ). Subsequent studies show that a wide range of macroeconomic and demographic factors (such as real GDP per capita, inflation, share of agriculture in GDP, natural resource rents, trade openness, foreign aid, human capital, and urbanization) explain cross‐country differences in tax revenue performance (Besley & Persson, ; Castro & Camarillo, ; Ghura, ; Gupta, ; Morrissey, Von Haldenwang, Von Schiller, Ivanyna, & Bordon, ; Teera & Hudson, ). These studies also provide compelling evidence indicating that institutional factors (such as bureaucratic quality, corruption, government stability, and the rule of law) shape a country's efficiency in tax mobilization.…”