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The collection efficiency of the value added tax: theory and international evidence
Joshua Aizenman, University of California, Santa Cruz
Yothin Jinjarak, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
ABSTRACT: This paper evaluates the political economy and structural factors explaining the collection
efficiency of the Value Added Tax [VAT]. We consider the case where the collection efficiency
is determined by the probability of audit and by the penalty on underpaying. Implementation
lags imply that the present policy maker determines the efficiency of the tax system next period.
Theory suggests that the collection efficiency is impacted by political economy considerations –
greater polarization and political instability would reduce the efficiency of the tax collection. In
addition, collection is impacted by structural factors affecting the ease of tax evasion, like the
urbanization level, the share of agriculture, and trade openness. Defining the collection
efficiency of the VAT as the ratio of the VAT revenue to aggregate consumption divided by the
standard VAT rate, we evaluate the evidence on VAT collection efficiency in a panel of 44
countries over 1970-99. The results are consistent with the theory - a one standard deviation
increase in durability of political regime, and in the ease and fluidity of political participation,
increase the VAT collection efficiency by 3.1% and 3.6%, respectively. A one standard
deviation increase in urbanization, trade openness, and the share of agriculture changes the VAT
collection efficiency by 12.7%, 3.9%, and - 4.8%, respectively. In addition, a one standard
deviation increase in GDP/Capita increases the tax efficiency by 8.1%. Qualitatively identical
results apply for an alternative measure of VAT collection efficiency, defined by the ratio of
VAT revenue to GDP divided by the standard VAT.
SUGGESTED CITATION: Joshua Aizenman and Yothin Jinjarak,
"The collection efficiency of the value added tax: theory and international evidence"
(August 1, 2005).
Department of Economics, UCSC.
Paper 605.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/ucscecon/605
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