posted on 2024-09-05, 22:09authored byMirza Hassan, Wilson Prichard
This paper explains the persistence of a tax system characterised by low revenue collection and extensive informality in Bangladesh. It combines analysis of long-term formal and informal institutions and of micro-level incentives shaping negotiation of short-term reform. The system is unusually informal, discretionary, and corrupt, but remains resistant to change because it delivers low and predictable tax rates to business, extensive opportunities for corruption to the tax administration, and an important vehicle for fundraising by political leaders and rent distribution to their elite supporters. We then explore the dynamics of micro-level reform and external pressure within the constraints of this overarching political bargain.
Funding
Default funder
History
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Citation
Hassan, M. and Prichard, W. (2016) The Political Economy of Domestic Tax Reform in Bangladesh: Political Settlements, Informal Institutions and the Negotiation of Reform, The Journal of Development Studies, 2016 Vol. 52, No. 12, 1704–1721