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Globalization and Developing Countries - a Shrinking Tax Base ?
Joshua Aizenman, University of California, Santa Cruz
Yothin Jinjarak, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
ABSTRACT: This paper evaluates the impact of globalization on the tax bases of countries at varying
stages of development. We see globalization as a process that induces countries to embrace
greater trade and financial integration, and macro stabilization. This in turn should shift their tax
base from “easy to collect” taxes [tariff, seigniorage, etc.] towards “hard to collect” taxes [VAT,
income tax, etc.]. We confirm this prediction – the revenue/GDP ratio of the “easy to collect”
taxes declined by about 20% in developing countries between the early 1980s and the late 1990s,
while the revenue/GDP of the “hard to collect” taxes increased by 9%. The relatively small
initial base of “hard to collect” taxes in developing countries implied a net 7% drop in total tax
revenue/GDP. Applying panel regressions and controlling for structural factors, we find that
trade openness and financial integration have a positive relationship with “hard to collect” taxes,
and negative relationship with the “easy to collect” taxes. The effects of globalization in our
panel regressions are even larger than the effects of the institutional and political variables
combined. Fiscal revenue from financial repression has also decreased, further reinforcing these
results. The high income and the middle income countries managed to more than compensate for
the revenue decline of the “easy to collect” taxes, increasing the total tax/GDP. In contrast, the
upper and low income developing countries experienced sizeable drop in the tax/GDP. We also
identify fiscal convergence: the coefficient of variation of tax revenue/GDP measures across
countries declined substantially during 1980s - 1990s. The cross country variation declined by
about 50% for seigniorage, about 30% for tariff, and about 15% for the “hard to collect” taxes.
These results are consistent with the notion that improving the performance of the “hard to
collect” taxes is more challenging than reducing the use of “easy to collect” sources of revenue.
SUGGESTED CITATION: Joshua Aizenman and Yothin Jinjarak,
"Globalization and Developing Countries - a Shrinking Tax Base ?"
(January 1, 2006).
Department of Economics, UCSC.
Paper 615.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/ucscecon/615
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