Tax revenue instability and tax revenue in developed and developing countries

被引:17
作者
Gnangnon, Sena Kimm [1 ]
机构
[1] World Trade Org, Geneva, Switzerland
来源
APPLIED ECONOMIC ANALYSIS | 2022年 / 30卷 / 88期
关键词
Tax revenue; Tax revenue instability; H1; H2; PANEL-DATA; TRADE LIBERALIZATION; PUBLIC-EXPENDITURE; GOVERNMENT SIZE; ECONOMIC-GROWTH; IMPACT; RESTRICTIONS; VOLATILITY; COMPONENTS; AID;
D O I
10.1108/AEA-09-2020-0133
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
PurposeThis paper aims to explore the effect of non-resource tax revenue instability on non-resource tax revenue in developed and developing countries. Design/methodology/approachThe analysis has used an unbalanced panel data set of 146 countries over the period 1981-2016, as well as the two-step system generalized methods of moment approach. FindingsThe empirical analysis has suggested that non-resource tax revenue instability influences negatively non-resource tax revenue share of gross domestic product. The magnitude of this negative effect is higher in less developed countries than in relatively advanced countries. This negative effect materializes through public expenditure instability: non-resource tax revenue instability exerts a higher effect on non-resource tax revenue share as the degree of public expenditure instability increases. Finally, non-resource tax revenue instability exerts a higher negative effect on non-resource tax revenue share as economic growth volatility rises, inflation volatility increases and terms of trade instability increases. Research limitations/implicationsThe main policy implication of this analysis is that policies that help ensure the stability of non-resource tax revenue also contribute to improving countries' non-resource tax revenue share. For example, governments' measures that help cope with or prevent the severe adverse effects of shocks on economies (shocks that could translate into higher tax revenue instability) would ultimately help enhance countries' tax revenue performance. Practical implicationsThe severity of the current COVID-19 pandemic shock (which is a supply and demand shock) and the macroeconomic uncertainty that it has generated - inter alia, in terms of economic growth instability, terms of trade instability, inflation volatility and public expenditure instability - are likely to result in severe tax revenue losses. Governments in both developed and developing countries would surely learn from the management of this crisis so as to prepare for possible future economic, financial and health crises with a view to dampening their adverse macroeconomic effects, including here their negative tax revenue effects. Originality/valueTo the best of the author's knowledge, this topic is being addressed in the empirical literature for the first time.
引用
收藏
页码:18 / 37
页数:20
相关论文
共 51 条
[21]   Trade liberalization and tax revenue in transition: an empirical analysis of the replacement strategy [J].
Crivelli, Ernesto .
EURASIAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2016, 6 (01) :1-25
[22]   Resource blessing, revenue curse? Domestic revenue effort in resource-rich countries [J].
Crivelli, Ernesto ;
Gupta, Sanjeev .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL ECONOMY, 2014, 35 :88-101
[23]   The composition of public expenditure and economic growth [J].
Devarajan, S ;
Swaroop, V ;
Zou, HF .
JOURNAL OF MONETARY ECONOMICS, 1996, 37 (02) :313-344
[24]   Consistent covariance matrix estimation with spatially dependent panel data [J].
Driscoll, JC ;
Kraay, AC .
REVIEW OF ECONOMICS AND STATISTICS, 1998, 80 (04) :549-560
[25]   FISCAL-POLICY AND ECONOMIC-GROWTH - AN EMPIRICAL-INVESTIGATION [J].
EASTERLY, W ;
REBELO, S .
JOURNAL OF MONETARY ECONOMICS, 1993, 32 (03) :417-458
[26]   Tax Revenue Instability in Sub-Saharan Africa: Consequences and Remedies [J].
Ebeke, Christian ;
Ehrhart, Helene .
JOURNAL OF AFRICAN ECONOMIES, 2012, 21 (01) :1-27
[27]   Openness, productivity and growth: What do we really know? [J].
Edwards, S .
ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 1998, 108 (447) :383-398
[28]  
Follmi R., 2018, SWISS J EC STAT, V154
[29]   Is government expenditure volatility harmful for growth? A cross-country analysis [J].
Furceri, Davide .
FISCAL STUDIES, 2007, 28 (01) :103-120
[30]   GOVERNMENT SIZE AND MACROECONOMIC STABILITY [J].
GALI, J .
EUROPEAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, 1994, 38 (01) :117-132